- Joined
- Feb 19, 2009
- Messages
- 1,162 (0.20/day)
- Location
- I live in Norway
Processor | R9 5800x3d | R7 3900X | 4800H | 2x Xeon gold 6142 |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asrock X570M | AB350M Pro 4 | Asus Tuf A15 |
Cooling | Air | Air | duh laptop |
Memory | 64gb G.skill SniperX @3600 CL16 | 128gb | 32GB | 192gb |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4080 |Quadro P5000 | RTX2060M |
Storage | Many drives |
Display(s) | AW3423dwf. |
Case | Jonsbo D41 |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850x |
Mouse | g502 Lightspeed |
Keyboard | G913 tkl |
Software | win11, proxmox |
We have been using x86 for the past 30+ years, I believe we will still use them for the next 30+ years at least. Indeed, the x86 instructions is so robust that it relegated the ARM to only "lesser" devices.
ARM is moving up and not down. Dualcore's quads, arms, working already, ready for netbooks already.
Whats keeping X86 the only desktop choice is ... Windows.
Linux can run on:
he Linux kernel is portable and supports the following computer architectures:
* Alpha architecture:
o DEC Alpha
o Samsung Alpha CPU
* Analog Devices
o Blackfin (since 2.6.22)
* Argonaut RISC Core (ARC) from ARC International
* ARM architecture:
o Acorn Archimedes and Risc PC series
o DEC StrongARM
o Marvell (formerly Intel) XScale
o Sharp Zaurus
o iPAQ
o Palm, Inc.'s Tungsten Handheld[1]
o Gamepark Holdings' GP2X
o Nokia 770 Internet Tablet
o Nokia N800
o Nokia N810
o Nokia N900
o gumstix
o Nintendo DS via DSlinux
o Sony Mylo
o Psion 5, 5MX, Series 7, netBook
o Some Models of Apple iPods (see iPodLinux)
o OpenMoko Neo 1973
o Freescale's (formerly Motorola) i.MX multimedia processors
* Atmel AVR32
* Axis Communications' ETRAX CRIS
* Freescale 68k architecture (68020, 68030, 68040, 68060):
o Some Amigas: A1200, A2500, A3000, A4000
o Apple Macintosh II, LC, Quadra, Centris and early Performa series
* Fujitsu FR-V
* Hewlett-Packard's PA-RISC family
* H8 architecture from Renesas Technology, formerly Hitachi.
o H8/300
o H8/500
* IBM
o System/390 (31-bit)
o zSeries and System z9 mainframes (64-bit)
* Intel IA-64 Itanium, Itanium II
* x86 architecture:
o IBM PC compatibles using IA-32 and x86-64 processors:
+ Intel 80386, 80486, and their AMD, Cyrix, Texas Instruments and IBM variants
+ The entire Pentium series and its Celeron and Xeon variants
+ The Intel Core processors
+ AMD 5x86, K5, K6, Athlon (all 32-bit versions), Duron, Sempron
+ x86-64: 64-bit processor architecture, now officially known as AMD64 (AMD) or Intel64 (Intel); supported by the Athlon 64, Opteron and Intel Core 2 processors, among others
+ Cyrix 5x86, 6x86 (M1), 6x86MX and MediaGX (National/AMD Geode) series
+ VIA Technologies Eden (Samuel II), VIA C3, and VIA C7 processors
o Microsoft's Xbox (Pentium III processor), through the Xbox Linux project
o SGI Visual Workstation (Pentium II/III processor(s) with SGI chipset)
o Sun Microsystems Sun386i workstation (80386 and 80486)
o Support for 8086, 8088, 80186, 80188 and 80286 CPUs is under development (the ELKS fork)[2]
* M32R from Mitsubishi
* MIPS architecture:
o Dingoo
o Infineon's Amazon & Danube Network Processors
o Jazz
o Cobalt Qube, Cobalt RaQ
o DECstation
o Loongson (MIPS-compatible), Loongson 2, and Loongson 2E from BLX IC Design Ltd (China)
o Some PlayStation 2 models, through the PS2 Linux project
o PlayStation Portable uClinux 2.4.19 port [1]
o Broadcom wireless chipsets
o Dreambox (HD models) [3]
o Cavium Octeon packet processors
* OpenRISC open core processor series:
o Beyond Semiconductor OR1200
o Beyond Semiconductor OR1210
* Power Architecture:
o IBM Servers
* PowerPC architecture:
o IBM's Cell
o Most pre-Intel Apple computers (all PCI-based Power Macintoshes, limited support for the older NuBus Power Macs)
o Clones of the PCI Power Mac marketed by Power Computing, UMAX and Motorola
o Amigas upgraded with a "Power-UP" card (such as the Blizzard or CyberStorm)
o AmigaOne motherboard from Eyetech Group Ltd (UK)
o Samantha from Soft3 (Italy)
o IBM RS/6000, iSeries and pSeries systems
o Pegasos I and II boards from Genesi
o Nintendo GameCube and Wii, through Nintendo GameCube Linux
o Project BlackDog from Realm Systems, Inc.
o Sony PlayStation 3
o V-Dragon CPU from Culturecom.
o Virtex II Pro Field Programmable Array (FPGA) from Xilinx with PowerPC cores.
o Dreambox (non-HD models) [4]
* SPARC
o SPARC (32-bit):
+ Sun-4 (to be abandoned in version 2.6.27)
+ SPARCstation/SPARCserver series (sun4c, sun4m, sun4d)
o SPARC (64-bit):
+ Sun Ultra series
+ Sun Blade
+ Sun Fire
+ SPARC Enterprise systems based on the UltraSPARC T1 and UltraSPARC T2 processors
* SuperH
o Sega Dreamcast (SuperH SH4)
o HP Jornada 680 through Jlime distribution (SuperH SH3)
* S+core
Windows:
X86
IA32
Loads of the instructions in a x86 cpu is dead tech, we hardly use some of it, but have to be there.
Makes powerconsumtion get higher with x86 no matter how you look at it.
Well, whats keeping x86 alive is mostly windows
The question lies in what impact will the android have.
Mobile phones, good god i love it, will it be good at tablets? will it be good at netbooks? exporting it to desktop, IT IS Linux, and linux is versatile. its kernel scales extremely well with device type. and in the end its the desktop market that remains the question.
Lastly i have to say, I dont like either inst. sets mentioned in this thread
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