@[email protected] to [email protected]English • 30 days agoREPORT: Arm is sensationally canceling the license that allowed Qualcomm to make Snapdragon chips which power everything from Microsoft's Copilot+ PCs to Samsung's Galaxy smartphones and tabletswww.windowscentral.commessage-square202fedilinkarrow-up1748
arrow-up1748external-linkREPORT: Arm is sensationally canceling the license that allowed Qualcomm to make Snapdragon chips which power everything from Microsoft's Copilot+ PCs to Samsung's Galaxy smartphones and tabletswww.windowscentral.com@[email protected] to [email protected]English • 30 days agomessage-square202fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish129•29 days agoA risky move… Or should I say… A RISCV move…
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish27•29 days ago“risc architecture is gonna change everything”
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish22•29 days agoIt really did. FYI, ARM stands for Advanced RISC Machines.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish5•29 days agoAnd before that “Acorn RISC Machines”. We had Acorn Archimedes systems at school that ran RISC OS.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish20•edit-229 days agoIt actually did, but not in a way people expected at the time that movie was made. It changed a lot underneath the hood.
minus-squareTerrasquelinkfedilinkEnglish5•29 days agohttps://y.yarn.co/2a4fe37e-ed9d-448b-af12-48a7a3202fa5_text.gif
minus-squareAvid AmoebalinkfedilinkEnglish14•29 days agoFor a firm that already have their own core designs that simply use the ARM instruction set, it might be easier to adapt to RISC-V. For a firm that licenses ARM cores on the other hand…
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•29 days agoYou should say that, yes, very hopefully much so.
A risky move… Or should I say… A RISCV move…
“risc architecture is gonna change everything”
Year of the riscv desktop
year of the linux riscv desktop
It’s a quote from a film
It really did.
FYI, ARM stands for Advanced RISC Machines.
And before that “Acorn RISC Machines”.
We had Acorn Archimedes systems at school that ran RISC OS.
It actually did, but not in a way people expected at the time that movie was made. It changed a lot underneath the hood.
Hack the planet!
https://y.yarn.co/2a4fe37e-ed9d-448b-af12-48a7a3202fa5_text.gif
For a firm that already have their own core designs that simply use the ARM instruction set, it might be easier to adapt to RISC-V. For a firm that licenses ARM cores on the other hand…
You should say that, yes, very hopefully much so.