Yet Apples entire success is based on moving to performance.
For a premium.
@ nina and aigo -- just for you guys
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVyNyYIxrZ8
Yet Apples entire success is based on moving to performance.
:awe:
Please tell me you're kidding.Absolute performance is useless for apple.
AFAIK OS X is UNIX based so porting it over to ARM is no biggie, certainly not for Apple.
How so? The majority of their R&D money has already been well spent on developing the Ax SoC's & software recompilation is just a one time thing, third party apps have to do it on their own if they are to continue using OS X as a platform. Apple will just have to do the legwork for some of their important applications like the iWork suite, the rest can be (probably) subsidized by Apple as far as certain other major third party apps are concerned.
I am not, the apple bussiness is not based on the best absolute performance, but in creating the need of differentiation in their user base. Absolute performance only matters to the dorky hardware enthusiast that lurks technical forums. I can assure our mindset cant be further away from the typical apple product consumer.Please tell me you're kidding.
ADD MOAR (pun on more) CORES!!!:thumbsup:
Ideally ARM uses such low power, you could just add one more, and if that isnt enough, add another, and keep on adding while optimizing the code to handle the multiple arm cores.
And due to arm's low power again, putting 5 - 10 - 15 - 20 isnt something very difficult... its implementing the code and fetch/handle which would be the hard part.
But if ur apple and dumping that much money into unified code, who knows if it isnt possible.
I would be shocked if there wasn't an R&D team at Apple that wasn't responsible for testing OSX on ARM. Heck, there might even be someone testing OSX on POWER just to be sure. It's prudent to keep your options open even if there isn't an immediate reason to act on them.
It isn't 2008 anymore.The interface is setup in the manner you describe, precisely because of the performance of the platform. Even the slick slide to unlock interface was an amazing bit of UI to hide how slow the hardware was.
I am not, the apple bussiness is not based on the best absolute performance, but in creating the need of differentiation in their user base. Absolute performance only matters to the dorky hardware enthusiast that lurks technical forums. I can assure our mindset cant be further away from the typical apple product consumer.
Absolute performance doesnt even matter to intel, who went the perf/watt route a while ago. So that argument doesnt even make sense coming from the intel cheerleader group.
Apple will be absolutely fine with their own socs, it was long overdue. From start they were a company that refused to settle with an processor and gpu provider, you cant be coasting thinking they will keep needing your products forever, this was proven so many times in their history that is pretty much a vox populi.
Sure you can, try one of'em Android-x86 builds (live bootable iso's) I've been doing this for nearly 2yrs now on my PC, just recently switched to a UEFI MB which gives me trouble booting with secure boot on.It isn't 2008 anymore.
Plus the interface stuff I'm talking about has nothing to do with performance. It's about not targeting such usage.
Let me give a completely unrelated example on Android just to illustrate a point. Did you know you can run your Android Nexus tablet off Ethernet? Yep, you can do this. Just plug in a USB to Ethernet dongle, an Apple one for example, and it is recognized and then you can surf the net without either WiFi or cell data service available. It works perfectly... Except it doesn't. It works fine for surfing but you can't actually do an initial configure of your device this way. It turns out the account setup method REQUIRES something other than Ethernet, or at least that was the case on Jelly Bean. Dunno about Lollipop. This has nothing to do with performance. It's just a bug, but one nobody cared about because it wasn't designed to be used this way in the first place.
Similarly, on iOS you can use a keyboard just fine, but you can't use it like a usual laptop keyboard since some keyboard commands don't do anything on iOS or else behave differently, because the OS wasn't really designed to be used in this manner. This would be easy to correct if Apple had a reason to do it, but up until now Apple had no reason to.
This thread made me think about the Mac Pro, and the fact that Apple would have a tough time building them without Intel into the foreseeable future, especially in their current innovative form factor.
Is that all you have to pick on, my choice of adjective? Replace innovative for constrictive, then.We've had recycle bins for as long as I remember so I'm not sure what's so innovative about it. I also put computer hardware in them for as long as I can remember so where is the innovation?
Is that all you have to pick on, my choice of adjective? Replace innovative for constrictive, then.
Not offended. Afraid of being misunderstood, perhaps. Sorry for my poor sense of humor!Come on, it was a joke not meant to pick on anybody. Sorry if it offended you.
ARM supports both virtualization and Linux.Apple cannot move to ARM this easily, for a non-obvious reason.
There are tons of people running Windows and Linux VMs on Macs. You can't do that with ARM.
Not sure what to make of this claim :hmm:Apple cannot move to ARM this easily, for a non-obvious reason.
There are tons of people running Windows and Linux VMs on Macs. You can't do that with ARM.
ARM supports both virtualization and Linux.
Really? What do you base this silly claim on?Nobody wants to run an ARM-based linux distribution.
