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The death of non-x86 is now at hand?
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The death of non-x86 is now at hand?
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The death of non-x86 is now at hand? |
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"Yousuf Khan" <news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote in message news:<1CxVb.13543$R6H.1791@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com>...
> http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 Interesting article, I honestly don't think they're way to far off base... I wouldn't be surprised to see the vast majority of diversity in CPU architecture disappear over the next few years. Carlo |
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On Sun, 08 Feb 2004 21:11:25 GMT, "Yousuf Khan"
<news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote: >http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 So now we have Sun, post-Ed (Zander that is). This could kill them off.... or?? I guess they could always buy up Gateway.<guffaw> Rgds, George Macdonald "Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me?? |
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Yousuf Khan <news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote:
: http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 Oh Yousuf, THANK you for that link. This is all just to funny. I mean, tooooo funny. Allow me please, to quote the 3rd paragraph: [start quote] In 1981 IBM announced the 5150 PC. It was the machine set to revolutionise business computing but it had a major design flaw. For some inexplicable reason IBM chose to use the 8088 processor in that first PC. It was a choice that bordered on the bizarre. The 8088 was the bottom of the line of the 8086 series of processors from Intel and most experts agreed it was one of the worst processor designs on the market. Its memory management has been described as "brain damaged" and register allocation for data was like a game of Russian roulette. [End Quote] I feel like I'm having a major case of Deja Vu! Way back in 1983, I was working at Zilog in Cupertino, California, and I remember the head of the Engineering department saying almost exactly the same thing (can't remember his name). I mean, this is almost word-for-word (the part about "brain damaged" memory management and register allocation = Russian roulette)! The reason I remember this is that I was SO struck by his comments (he was x-Intel) and that I couldn't believe he actually confided in me, a fresh out-of-college puke. Man, what a trip down memory lane to read this article. As I said, tooooooo funny! Best regards, Jack -- -------- The end to "Personal Computing" as we know it is just around the corner. TCPA will take away ALL rights from you, the consumer. Learn more about it here: http://www.againsttcpa.com/what-is-tcpa.html and here: http://www.againsttcpa.com/tcpa-faq-en.html |
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"Carlo Razzeto" <crazzeto@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:4f91caa5.0402082125.1d623a54@posting.google.com... > "Yousuf Khan" <news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote in message news:<1CxVb.13543$R6H.1791@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com>... > > http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 > > Interesting article, I honestly don't think they're way to far off > base... I wouldn't be surprised to see the vast majority of diversity > in CPU architecture disappear over the next few years. I can't fault them for any flaws in logic either. It makes sense that x86 descendents will take over the world, especially as they get expanded and cleaned up, through the natural evolutionary processes. They've taken the time to explain what the remaining advantages were in proprietary architectures over x86, and how they are now mostly disappearing too. I think one of the main driving influences behind trying to prevent x86 from taking over was that Intel would have too much control over the standard. But as has now been demonstrated, alternative companies like AMD, can also drive standards in the x86 field, so there is room for evolution without being locked into a single vendor. If Intel and AMD and the rest of the x86 field are smart, they will setup a consortium or a committee to drive x86 development, much like Sparc International does for Sparc, MIPS International does for MIPS, or Arm Holdings does for ARM. The time is right to turn x86 from a defacto standard to a true dejure standard. Yousuf Khan |
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"George Macdonald" <fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote in message
news h9e205fjj7ss0ptg76iivrrun9uago0p6@4ax.com...> On Sun, 08 Feb 2004 21:11:25 GMT, "Yousuf Khan" > <news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote: > > >http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 > > So now we have Sun, post-Ed (Zander that is). This could kill them off.... > or?? I guess they could always buy up Gateway.<guffaw> What do you mean? I thought Sun is claiming Opteron to be their saviour? Yousuf Khan |
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"jack" <jack@ibm.com> wrote in message
news:c07m1j$14dtt2$1@ID-127331.news.uni-berlin.de... > I feel like I'm having a major case of Deja Vu! Way back in 1983, I was > working at Zilog in Cupertino, California, and I remember the head of > the Engineering department saying almost exactly the same thing (can't > remember his name). I mean, this is almost word-for-word (the part > about "brain damaged" memory management and register allocation = > Russian roulette)! The reason I remember this is that I was SO struck > by his comments (he was x-Intel) and that I couldn't believe he actually > confided in me, a fresh out-of-college puke. > > Man, what a trip down memory lane to read this article. As I said, > tooooooo funny! Well, I'm sure everyone was saying the same things about the 8086 memory management scheme back then, it was a common sentiment. However, Intel did make the segment mechanism completely useful when they introduced the Protected Mode of operation. However, here's another quote from the article: <quote> Now it might seem that 8086 series had nothing going for it at all. Here was a 16bit processor that was little more than a kludged up 8bit processor and so bad that almost nobody loved it. But that turned out to be an advantage. Where programmers on competing processors were happy to use assembly language, getting anywhere with an 8086 meant a decent compiler was essential. Compiler technology came on in leaps and bounds. </quote> I don't know if I agree with this. I don't think there were necessarily any more assembly language programmers for other architectures than there were for 8086 at the time. I think the general transition towards compilers was ongoing anyways, whether x86 spurred it or not. In fact, I'd hazard a guess that there were more x86 assembly programmers than for any other architecture simply because of the numbers of x86 hardware sold. Yousuf Khan |
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Yousuf Khan wrote:
> "George Macdonald" <fammacd=!SPAM^nothanks@tellurian.com> wrote in message > news h9e205fjj7ss0ptg76iivrrun9uago0p6@4ax.com...> >>On Sun, 08 Feb 2004 21:11:25 GMT, "Yousuf Khan" >><news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> wrote: >> >> >>>http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 >> >>So now we have Sun, post-Ed (Zander that is). This could kill them > > off.... > >>or?? I guess they could always buy up Gateway.<guffaw> > > > What do you mean? I thought Sun is claiming Opteron to be their saviour? > No. Sun is merely seeing 10K Opteron server sales per quarter - and growing - and they have decided that they want to be part of that market. Sun is a big enough company that even if they had had *all* of that market it wouldn't have saved them from bleeding red ink. |
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"Rob Stow" <rob.stow@sasktel.net> wrote in message
news:102f7nfpje2te9b@corp.supernews.com... > No. Sun is merely seeing 10K Opteron server sales per quarter - > and growing - and they have decided that they want to be part of > that market. Sun is a big enough company that even if they had had > *all* of that market it wouldn't have saved them from bleeding > red ink. I don't know, the real money is in selling support contracts to customers, which is an ongoing revenue stream. The initial cost of the servers is not where the profits are at. Yousuf Khan |
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In article <1CxVb.13543$R6H.1791@twister01.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com
>, Yousuf Khan <news.20.bbbl67@spamgourmet.com> writes >http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=14038 "At least there will be less fundamental change in the industry a decade from now, the x86-128 will be much less of an upset." Aaaaarrrghhh! -- already talking of x86-128.. -- A. Top posters. Q. What's the most annoying thing on Usenet? |
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