DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
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When Apple can do this, anybody can do this too. It's just matter of time and resources. Qualcomm, ARM Cortex and any start-up. Nobody needs to beg Intel for x86 license.
Instead they have to beg ARM for an ARM license. And I'm sorry to say that nobody in the ARM world has caught up with Apple yet. Or even AMD (Zen2). Maybe someday Apple will license one of their core designs to Huawei or . . . whoever, who will then turn around and use a custom interconnect to produce a beastly 64c server processor, with SVE2 tacked-on for good measure. Then AMD will have to worry. As it stands, Rome went a long way towards killing the existing ARM competition. ThunderX2 is looking a lot worse right now. So is Qualcomm's 64c chip (which is embargoed in some large markets anyway).
For now, A-series chips are staying in their cage.
And regarding RISC-V. Actual RISC-V CPUs are weak in performance because lack of development at this CPU not because instruction set.
ehhhh
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17611047
And that's just one thread of criticisms. I've read other complaints. RISC-V may be of great benefit to markets that want a locally-developed CPU to please some centralized autocratic government. Outside of that, I have little hope for it.
RISC-V is cheaper and more open version of ARM instruction set.
Is it? You can license a current-gen ARM core and get all kinds of resource support for matching it to the design rules of a specific existing node for what probably costs less than hiring your own designers to try and figure out how to leverage RISC-V well enough to beat said ARM core. Can you hire a team to beat an A76-based chip on a core-per-core basis? No? I can't either. Maybe if I had enough money, I could poach a few people from Rockchip (or wherever) to throw together a 4xA76 + 4xA55 chip via DynamIQ (also provided by ARM; very nice of them, isn't it?). That's an attainable goal.
Eventually someone may put up the piles of cash necessary to make a truly-open RISC-V design. Then I can copy that design (or iterate upon it) and compete with people schlepping standard ARM designs. But someone's going to lose a bunch of money up front. Just not me!
So if you want fight in server market for big money then you need develop powerful CPU from scratch -> best choice is RISC-V. IMHO that's why it attracts attention.
Name one company even looking at RISC-V to do that. Note that making a state-anointed replacement CPU to x86 and ARM does not count, since that is not "fighting in the server market". That's making homebrew hardware with backdoors specific to your own local intelligence agency (instead of the NSA or whoever).