- Mar 11, 2013
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Just want to know is not there any alternative processor makers brand except INTEL AND AMD?i wonder how can be only two companies can run on business in this BIG market.Are we consumers are bound to choose between them?
Just want to know is not there any alternative processor makers brand except INTEL AND AMD?i wonder how can be only two companies can run on business in this BIG market.Are we consumers are bound to choose between them?
Just want to know is not there any alternative processor makers brand except INTEL AND AMD?i wonder how can be only two companies can run on business in this BIG market.Are we consumers are bound to choose between them?
Well, way back in the day you could go Cyrix M series. They made Pentium II clones that ran up to 266mhz. At a whopping 3.5v! lololol
I owned one for a while, an MII-233 that I overclocked to 266mhz. It eventually caught fire (serious), burnt a bunch of mosfets off my motherboard.
I believe National Semiconductor was the parent company.
Sadly, they no longer exist.![]()
It has to do with x86 licensing. Intel, not surprisingly, is hesitant to grant new licenses to it's architecture design. As a result, AMD and VIA are the only companies currently making PC-type x86 processors, and VIA isn't a serious player.
More specifically, it's patents of certain x86 instruction implementations. An ISA isn't patentable. How specific instructions are implemented are though. So that means a company can now implement a Pentium-compatible CPU right now and Intel would have no legal standing to stop them since all patents that pertain to the original Pentium have expired.
At 5 years there's a very good chance the patent would expire before the inventor got a product to market.
They were bought by VIA and VIA incorporated Cyrix and Centaur (another CPU company they bought) design properties into their later processors.
Cyrix M was no Pentium II clone, it was a totally different uarch. Several players at this time were competing for the budget PC segment but they were stamped out by AMD's K6-2 and Intel's Celeron.
5 years in the tech industry? 5 years ago Conroe was released. That was the era of SSE3 and SSSE3. 6 years before that, and the original SSE was a brand new thing.
7 years ago Conroe was released5 years ago was Nehalem.
gah... I can't mathsThanks. Hopefully the point isn't lost in my inability to subtract.
5 years in the tech industry? 5 years ago Nehalem was released.
5 years ago and 4g was first starting to roll out
5 years ago 802.11g was the fastest wifi available
The tech industry moves fast, so why should it be encumbered by patents that last longer than many tech companies survive?
If you have a tech company and you can't get something new out in 5 years, chances are you won't have a tech company for very long.
Well, way back in the day you could go Cyrix M series. They made Pentium II clones that ran up to 266mhz. At a whopping 3.5v! lololol
I owned one for a while, an MII-233 that I overclocked to 266mhz. It eventually caught fire (serious), burnt a bunch of mosfets off my motherboard.
I believe National Semiconductor was the parent company.
Sadly, they no longer exist.![]()
You're confusing product with research. The basic research that enabled Nehalem to become a product took much longer than the 5 years. If the patents expired and all that research was freely available Nehalem wouldn't have existed. Why invest a few billion dollars if your competitors are given free access to all your work?
Same thing with 4g, it was probably in the lab for a decade.
Or let's use something more current: Intel's FinFET transistors. I'll bet they have been working on them for a dozen years. Once they had them designed it may have taken them 5 years to productize them. A 5 year patent means everybody gets them from Intel before they can even put a product out.
A tablet is no direct substitute for a high performance desktop when actual work is being done.It has to do with x86 licensing. Intel, not surprisingly, is hesitant to grant new licenses to it's architecture design. As a result, AMD and VIA are the only companies currently making PC-type x86 processors, and VIA isn't a serious player.
ARM-based architectures made by Qualcomm, Nvidia, Samsung, Apple, and others currently dominate the tablet and phone space, which is the long-term future of consumer PC use. Intel's hegemony in the desktop space is becoming increasingly irrelevant.
I still have my 6x86 166+ system and it still runs windows 98Mine was actually labeled IBM instead of cyrix. I think cyrix designed this chip and ibm manufactured it. I have it o/c to 150 mhz woohoo
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A tablet is no direct substitute for a high performance desktop when actual work is being done.
In that segment though, its only Intel or AMD.