Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
Well its nice that you countacted Bob. For your information . Being a few years older than Bob. I am not surprized that you would put the word Chip with micro processors. ut CHIP in real world is slang for Chip off the Block. Meaning father like Son. CHIP.
I don't believe Bod doesn't remember Chip. I never said I was Chip. Bob was a little young for my group. 3 years younger than I . When your Kids 3 years is a Big differance.
Could you fill in the blank in these sentences?
"I know Bob because we were/are ______." (e.g. "students at the same school", "relatives", "coworkers", etc.)?
"I want Intel to have 60% margins because ______." (e.g. "I work at Intel", "I own a lot of their stock", "I have cash burning a hole in my pocket and want to give it to Intel when I buy my next CPU", any of the previous with "I" replaced by "a friend or family member", "IBM worked with the nazis", etc.)
Why I Hate AMD . Hate is a strong word. I just don't believe for 1 second that AMD has ever stood on its own legs. IBM has always been their forcing Intels hand. Intel made a deal with IBM not the Industry. AMD should have been allowed to make Cpu's for IBM because of the agreement. X86 was developed By intel not for the IBM pc's but for the PC industry as a whole. AMD took it upon themselves to reverse engineer intels 386 because AMD couldn't do it on its own .
Intel screwed up by not wording the contract with IBM more simply. Intel did leave the door open for AMD to Steal it tech and they did .
IBM required any CPU supplier have a second source. It wasn't a mistake that AMD could legally produce clones - it was a strict requirement from IBM. Without AMD as a second supplier, IBM would have chosen a different CPU instead of Intel's 8088 chip. Intel knew what they were getting into. As far as I know, IBM didn't restrict Intel from selling to other companies, so Intel was free to sell their chips to "the PC industry as a whole".
Everyone says Intel is monoply . What is AMD . They rely on IBM for research .
AMD has <50% of the market. It'd be hard for AMD to be a monopoly. Intel, on the other hand, has a lot of the market, and there are too many allegations of foul play on their part to not conclude that they've abused their market power.
Why is it bad if IBM and AMD share R&D for manufacturing technology? It means each side spends less, and can charge consumers less as a result. Isn't that a good thing? Anyone who wants to pay a lot for something is stupid.
I here people talking about AMD and High K / metal gates @ 45. If that happens great for them right.
Who cares? It's like SOI. The only people who should care are the people at the company that makes the product. If someone produced a fast chip for a reasonable price on 180nm technology with aluminum interconnect, I'd buy it over a high-K/metal gate, copper & low-k interconnect 32nm chip that was slower/more expensive/worse. It's just marketing bullet points... Intel is definitely milking the 45nm stuff to the limit. When I'm buying a product, I don't care why it's better - just that it is better.
There's a funny video on youtube where someone is in a retail store asking people what they think about the Hafnium technology and nobody knows or cares what it is (I think the video is by AMD...but seriously, ask ordinary people on the street how many nm their CPUs are).
Why would MS. Do this . EPIC MS is scared to death of a OS for desktop using high level language.
WTF are you talking about? Everybody uses high-level languages on every OS (outside of toasters, light switches, and ). Last I checked, you can run Windows 2003 Server on IA64 (EPIC) machines. Microsoft chose a non-x86 architecture for the Xbox360. As I understand it, managed code is generally more portable than normal C/C++. If Microsoft is scare of a non-x86 architecture, they aren't showing it.
I say this that AMD64 / IBM and MS . have already effectively brought innovation to a crawl. Witness K8.
AMD 64 isn't goog for progress it chokes it.
AMD64 made x86 much less sucky, while retaining compatibility with the many billions of dollars of existing software. If you happen to be lucky enough to not depend on legacy apps, good for you. In the real world, companies live and die by programs written 10 years ago by an intern whose source code they no longer have.
RISC vs. CISC is over. I'm not going to debate it with someone who won't come out and say what he's thinking but instead likes to drop little tidbits and expect us to figure out what they mean.I wanted to add this bit. How it relates I will leave tuglo you.
