Arkaign
Lifer
- Oct 27, 2006
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It's as fast as the CPU cores in the next gen consoles. :awe:
What is a "full fledged x86 processors"? Atom?! Jaguar?! Pildedriver?! IB?! Haswell?!
So a future product will be better than a present ARM core? Wow... :$
What a luck for ARM that nobody is selling standalone CPUs. We talking here about SoCs. So the CPU design is only one part of the product.
Nobody will use Intel in the future because they do not want to be tied to one manufacture. That's the reason why ARM is winning this war: If you don't like your partner go to another one or design an own chip.
Jaguar is sort of pathetic, but in fact it's still faster than the processor in the Shield when comparing raw CPU performance. If you want to talk only about a single core, I guess you could consider them roughly equal in some ways? But that's a horrible target in terms of performance. 28nm is old garbage at this time for mobile consideration, and Jaguar looks like roadkill compared to full desktop x86 stuff even on the level of Phenom II, let alone Sandy Bridge from how many years ago? That's not a complete slam against Jaguar, it wasn't intended to be a competitor to even midrange processors. It's a budget, low performance, moderately efficient part. The best thing I can say about it is that it's far better than the previous Atoms, which most can agree were even worse.
SoC / CPU is semantics at best, everything we're talking about in the context of ultra mobile CPU performance is clearly talking about SoC, but in particular, the CPU portion of that device.
No, ARM has historically won this market because the big guys simply ignored it for many years. And people will definitely use Intel IF the performance is staggeringly better as it almost certainly will be, combined with power efficiency impossible with the low-end fabs used by the competition.
It's very similar to what's happening to AMD on the desktop. They don't have the R&D budget, nor access to competitive fabs in order to produce a processor that has the necessary raw performance or power/heat characteristics in any competitive manner on the midrange to high end markets. You can argue that they present a certain value in the entry level markets, largely due to superior iGPU (or the graphics portion of the so-called APU).
Now that Intel is all guns blazing on mobile, we're going to see mass destruction in that market for the next 5-8 years. It's not smart money to bet against Intel when their entire mindset and vast resources are utterly focused on a single target.