Theoretically it all makes sense, much like when FPU co-processors were optional add-ons to mainstream computers in the late 80s/early 90s, they became standard to improve overall performance with mainstream OS/software updated to take advantage of them.
On the flip side, chips are already so powerful nowadays with their 10+ cores and on-board specialized extensions for codecs, security and such - what are the odds yet-another co-processor chip can really improve performance 2 folds? Not to forget OSes and apps will need updates to use this as well.
It's a long shot, if anything.