DrAspirino
Banned
So... today we had a huge announcement: Apple is going full-on ARM CPUs (specifically their in-house developed A chips). That on its own was a huge sign that Intel (and its x86 architecture) is stagnating.
True, that doesn't affect us too much right now, and won't even be a thing for current-gen and next-gen consoles. However, Apple is not the only company transitioning to ARM: Microsoft has already transitioned, as well as Nintendo (yeah...the Switch).
So... Microsoft has a full Windows 10 version that its released along their x86 editions, which has the full DirectX 12 APIs, so there's that.
FreeBSD (current PlayStation and Switch OS of choice) also has an ARM version running side-by-side their current version.
Vulkan, Unreal Engine and Unity Engine are already running on ARM, so there's that as well.
Since Sony and Microsoft had a tough time designing cooling solutions for those monsters of SoCs, while keeping power consumption in check on next-gen consoles (XSX and PS5), maybe the future "PS6" or "next-xbox" (if they ever become a thing) could have ARM processors in them, since the later require far less power and produce less heat.
Time will tell.
What do you think, guys?
True, that doesn't affect us too much right now, and won't even be a thing for current-gen and next-gen consoles. However, Apple is not the only company transitioning to ARM: Microsoft has already transitioned, as well as Nintendo (yeah...the Switch).
So... Microsoft has a full Windows 10 version that its released along their x86 editions, which has the full DirectX 12 APIs, so there's that.
FreeBSD (current PlayStation and Switch OS of choice) also has an ARM version running side-by-side their current version.
Vulkan, Unreal Engine and Unity Engine are already running on ARM, so there's that as well.
Since Sony and Microsoft had a tough time designing cooling solutions for those monsters of SoCs, while keeping power consumption in check on next-gen consoles (XSX and PS5), maybe the future "PS6" or "next-xbox" (if they ever become a thing) could have ARM processors in them, since the later require far less power and produce less heat.
Time will tell.
What do you think, guys?
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