Quote from: GeorgeS on November 03, 2024, 17:27:32No surprise here.
While Qualcomm may of paved the way with their incompatible & under performing devices others have (Apple for example) successfully (more or less) switched over to ARM based systems from x86.
However it Apples case they may have a more robust Emulator AND much smaller number of developers to convince to compile native applications.
Adding extra players in the 'win-on-ARM' game only makes sense if there is a COMPELLING feature or reason to support the olatform other than 'it is there'.
End users and corporate $$$ can easily be better spent purchasing something powered by an AMD chip (or even Intel) to ensure the best compatibility.
Long awaited, it will be interesting to see what they come up with.
Keeping in mind there are TWO structures to break away from - both x86 AND Microsoft.
Really just x86. Most things MS are Azure/Entra and cloud now. And any legacy app can be thrown behind VDI on...Azure/Entra VMs! Lol.
x86 is the real hold over. But is it really? Look at Nintendo's console, what we can do on iOS/Android, and the Apple M series. ARM has also been breaking into the datacenter for a long time with arrays of cores, forcing x86 to keep up (mostly by AMD, Intel is still a no show).
All software has to do is decide if ARM is worth the time/money and its all over for x86. Which would also force the hand of hold over companies stuck on 1990's platforms. if x86 goes poof, their end user experience goes with it. Forcing huge platform upgrades in order to roll over to ARM end user compute.
ARM vs x86 might be the best thing left for the industry from a technology perspective. x86 is pretty much at its peak now deep in a wide core race (look at AMD's 7000 vs 9000 debate).