• verdi@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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    5 hours ago

    ARM cpus are great for battery life and aren’t saddled with decades of legacy support, what they are not is a physics bending device. It’s not a geekbench benchmark that is going to change the reality of physics. Now, if one’s use of a computing device is circumscribed to opening web pages, then the iPhone is the device for you. Also, don’t forget to breathe in and breathe out.

    • theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      As someone who was very excited about ARM several years ago and still is using ARM for half of my homelab equipment, it’s unfortunately rapidly become irrelevant. x86 CPUs can now run as efficiently at the same TDP while still beating it in performance with all the benefits of x86. Unless something unforeseen changes, I probably won’t be buying any more ARM machines for homelab/server use. Still using what I already own, of course.

      RISC-V seems cool though, but not sure that it will be more attractive than x86.

      • verdi@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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        4 hours ago

        I’m still excited, ARM is still a gen ahead of x86 in power constrained situations, for energy efficiency, where peak compute is not a requirement. That illusion fades away fast though, when one multitasks or needs a non hardware accelerated pipeline. For single purpose devices like game consoles, that advantage in power consumption looks mighty sweet. Let’s see what AMD conjures up for the next gen PS6 or as a response to Lunar lake. The mobile ecosystem, especially Apple, have a vertical integration that makes HW development more agile as they are not saddled by decades of legacy support and tech debt.

    • ripcord@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      This seems nonsensical to me. It’s physically impossible for ARM competitors to match the performance of Apple ARM?

      Not to mention that we’re talking about their lowest-specced CPU here and there are far more powerful ones.