- Mar 20, 2000
 
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Back in the day risc was known for floating point performance that used to trounce the x86 platform (depending on the application), but that simply isn't true anymore. Apple made you pay through the teeth for it which made the down sides (lack of compatibility, programing) that much more apparent.
Floating Point was their bread and butter, but if there's no programing or widespread acceptance like AMD/Intel have garnered it's really not something an end user can take advantage of for anything other than niche computing.
Dose mac even sell mac books with risc processors any more? Personally, I find it a little odd risc computing didn't garner more attention; but over the years it's always found a niche for itself.
niche? both intel and amd moved their x86 processors to a risc-stlye core with an x86 decoder in front more than a decade ago. maybe the atom isn't built that way but i doubt it.
			
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