Comment by kevin_thibedeau 7 years ago Most CPUs are 8-bit with 32-bit beginning to take over. They usually don't have more than 256K. 5 comments kevin_thibedeau Reply msla 7 years ago Most CPUs aren't in self-hosting systems. kevin_thibedeau 7 years ago Yes they are. Embedded applications outnumber top end computers by an order of magnitude. nineteen999 7 years ago Perhaps he means that they are not generally self-hosted, in that we generally tend to cross-compile for the embedded hardware, rather than compiling on the embedded hardware. 1 reply → msla 7 years ago I think you just agreed with me.
msla 7 years ago Most CPUs aren't in self-hosting systems. kevin_thibedeau 7 years ago Yes they are. Embedded applications outnumber top end computers by an order of magnitude. nineteen999 7 years ago Perhaps he means that they are not generally self-hosted, in that we generally tend to cross-compile for the embedded hardware, rather than compiling on the embedded hardware. 1 reply → msla 7 years ago I think you just agreed with me.
kevin_thibedeau 7 years ago Yes they are. Embedded applications outnumber top end computers by an order of magnitude. nineteen999 7 years ago Perhaps he means that they are not generally self-hosted, in that we generally tend to cross-compile for the embedded hardware, rather than compiling on the embedded hardware. 1 reply → msla 7 years ago I think you just agreed with me.
nineteen999 7 years ago Perhaps he means that they are not generally self-hosted, in that we generally tend to cross-compile for the embedded hardware, rather than compiling on the embedded hardware. 1 reply →
Most CPUs aren't in self-hosting systems.
Yes they are. Embedded applications outnumber top end computers by an order of magnitude.
Perhaps he means that they are not generally self-hosted, in that we generally tend to cross-compile for the embedded hardware, rather than compiling on the embedded hardware.
1 reply →
I think you just agreed with me.