▲ | menaerus 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> They already are open enough to boot and run Linux, the things that Asahi struggles with are end-user peripherals. That's for entertainment and for geeks such as ourselves but not realistically for hosting a service in a data center that millions of people would depend on. > These are manufactured on far older nodes than Apple Silicon True but I don't think this would be the main bottleneck but perhaps. IMO it's the core design that is lacking. > there will be no incentive for ARM chip designers to invest into performance as long as there are no customers Well, AWS is hosting a multitude of their EC2 instances - Graviton4 (Neoverse V2 cores). This implies that there are customers. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | mschuster91 a day ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Well, AWS is hosting a multitude of their EC2 instances - Graviton4 (Neoverse V2 cores). This implies that there are customers. AWS has a bit of a different cost-benefit calculation though. For them, similar to Apple, ARM is a hedge against the AMD/Intel duopoly, and they can run their own services (for which they have ample money for development and testing) for far cheaper because the power efficiency of ARM systems is better than x86 - and like in the early AWS time that started off as Amazon selling off spare compute capacity, they expose to the open market what they don't need. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
▲ | rowanG077 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> That's for entertainment and for geeks such as ourselves but not realistically for hosting a service in a data center that millions of people would depend on. Why not? Well form factor is an issue. But you can easily fit a few mac pros in a couple Us. Support is generally better then some HP or Dell servers. | |||||||||||||||||
|