- Joined
- Feb 3, 2017
- Messages
- 3,806 (1.32/day)
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | ROG STRIX B650E-F GAMING WIFI |
Memory | 2x16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 CL36 (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5) |
Video Card(s) | INNO3D GeForce RTX™ 4070 Ti SUPER TWIN X2 |
Storage | 2TB Samsung 980 PRO, 4TB WD Black SN850X |
Display(s) | 42" LG C2 OLED, 27" ASUS PG279Q |
Case | Thermaltake Core P5 |
Power Supply | Fractal Design Ion+ Platinum 760W |
Mouse | Corsair Dark Core RGB Pro SE |
Keyboard | Corsair K100 RGB |
VR HMD | HTC Vive Cosmos |
- Are you seriously talking about standardizing chipsets and sockets in terms of competing with ARM/RISCV? The ecosystem for pretty much everything not x86/64 is highly custom and proprietary and manufacturer support for running anything not intended - say, some Linux distro - is anywhere between lacking and nonexistent.Needed evolutionay steps, to better compete with ARM / RISCV / OTHERS:
For first step, let they standardize chipsets and sockets, so user can replace Intel CPU with AMD CPU, without changing mobo. Then second step, let create x86R (reset), with reduced instructions, well designed memory models, vector processing, usability for phones / tablets, and other aspects that are currently messed and convoluted. Final third step, license it for any other company that want use any core existing (Intel or AMD) or make their custom core and need only ISA.
- The instruction set part is wishful thinking. All x86 implementations today do micro-ops - complexity and legacy are a burden mainly on decoder. Now read your list and compare that to what for example ARM (or Apple) is doing lately, that should be a fun comparison about what direction the trend is.
- Usability for phones/tablets is not a technical question but a market one. Intel did about a generation worth of actual attempt to make phone and tablet SoCs. They were not half bad but serious efforts were discontinued primarily because the profit margin was not good enough vs doing more desktop and data center stuff. If they want to move into that segment, this might not be as hard of a transition as you seem to think. Same applies for AMD - the new handhelds are already halfway there, they are getting a lot of good intel about power consumption challenges.
- I do agree on x86 licensing but unfortunately that is a real mess. The main reason licensing has not been done is fear of real competition - and what better example to illustrate than Nvidia not being able to secure a license back when they tried to get one (and were not yet the behemoth of a company they are today). Lets see if the new Advisory Group changes anything in that regard.