Alien Top
  • Communities
  • Create Post
  • heart
    Support Lemmy
  • search
    Search
  • Login
  • Sign Up
FrostedGiestB to Hardware@hardware.watchEnglish · 3 years ago

CNBC: How ARM Powers Chips By Apple, Amazon, Google And More

youtu.be

external-link
message-square
7
link
fedilink
1
external-link

CNBC: How ARM Powers Chips By Apple, Amazon, Google And More

youtu.be

FrostedGiestB to Hardware@hardware.watchEnglish · 3 years ago
message-square
7
link
fedilink
How Arm Powers Chips By Apple, Amazon, Google And More
youtu.be
external-link
Arm beat expectations in its first post-IPO earnings report Wednesday. Its low-power chip architecture is in nearly every smartphone, replaced Intel’s x86 pr...
  • FrostedGiestOPB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    3 years ago

    Everything you said applies to ARM more than a decade ago. R&D money from over hundreds of billions of battery-limited devices has changed that. Of which Apple has sold over 2.32 billion $429-1599 iPhones

    cpu core that works at anywhere from 1ghz to 6ghz,

    AMD dispelled the megahertz myth, now the gigahertz myth, in the 90s. I should know, I read the online forum posts about it in real time.

    • 3rd gen Apple Silicon hits 4.05 GHz at under 45W.

    • 1st gen Qualcomm Spandragon X Elite hits 4.2GHz at under 80W.

    • 1st 6GHz Intel chip over 250W.

    Both ARM chips likely does more per clock cycle than x86. As both have larger/more complex cores.

    When ~80% of PCs annually shipped globally are battery-powered laptops then a desktop achievement of that magnitude is very relevant to more people.

    enterprise servers,

    AWS Graviton

    Fugaku became the fastest supercomputer in the world in the June 2020 TOP500 list as well as becoming the first ARM architecture-based computer to achieve this.

    What x86 has an advantage of is sheer number of software it has over ARM. But that is also changing as more people buy into it. It will accelerate as soon as Windows on Snapdragon 2016-2024 exclusivity expires

Hardware@hardware.watch

hardware@hardware.watch

Subscribe from Remote Instance

Create a post
You are not logged in. However you can subscribe from another Fediverse account, for example Lemmy or Mastodon. To do this, paste the following into the search field of your instance: !hardware@hardware.watch

A place for quality hardware news, reviews, and intelligent discussion.

Visibility: Public
globe

This community can be federated to other instances and be posted/commented in by their users.

  • 1 user / day
  • 1 user / week
  • 6 users / month
  • 22 users / 6 months
  • 13 local subscribers
  • 102 subscribers
  • 515 Posts
  • 5.04K Comments
  • Modlog
  • mods:
  • communick@hardware.watch
  • Raphael@communick.news
  • BE: 0.19.17
  • Modlog
  • Instances
  • Docs
  • Code
  • join-lemmy.org