- Jul 3, 2005
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A couple of decades from now, 2011 maybe remembered as one of the titanic shifts in the chip industry. Not only with the success of iPad, the meteoric rise of Android in mobile, the rise of a number of ARM manufacturers (which include nVidia), and MS porting their main client OS to ARM, but now comes another possible piece in the puzzle:
http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4215518/ARM-working-on-AMD-to-drop-x86
http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4215519/Analysis--Why-ARM-AMD-makes-sense?pageNumber=1
I don't think that AMD would abandon x86 wholesale for the next several years, for doing that leaves too many usefull assets on the table, but I think after the management team, they are finally showing the signs of waking up to the times. Heterogeneous chip with both x86 and ARM, plus some component from throughput design (GPU), along with the appropriate software stack, has been something that's been advocated by many for a while now, including myself. This would allow a smooth and less painful transition away from x86, and let each ISA stand on its own merits without the legacy of binary compatibility standing in the way.
While there isn't anything definitive yet at this point, and may not be for some months; if ARM and pull this off, it would be another significant move in the industry toward the eventual final confrontation between ARM and intel. At the risk of making it sound overly dramatic, these are exciting times. It will take some time to see everything where they may fall, but we should watch this closely.
http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4215518/ARM-working-on-AMD-to-drop-x86
http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4215519/Analysis--Why-ARM-AMD-makes-sense?pageNumber=1
I don't think that AMD would abandon x86 wholesale for the next several years, for doing that leaves too many usefull assets on the table, but I think after the management team, they are finally showing the signs of waking up to the times. Heterogeneous chip with both x86 and ARM, plus some component from throughput design (GPU), along with the appropriate software stack, has been something that's been advocated by many for a while now, including myself. This would allow a smooth and less painful transition away from x86, and let each ISA stand on its own merits without the legacy of binary compatibility standing in the way.
While there isn't anything definitive yet at this point, and may not be for some months; if ARM and pull this off, it would be another significant move in the industry toward the eventual final confrontation between ARM and intel. At the risk of making it sound overly dramatic, these are exciting times. It will take some time to see everything where they may fall, but we should watch this closely.
