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Comment by sylware

4 days ago

It should be RISC-V... who is in charge at Intel??

Is this related to the rumors of softbank (ARM) money injection in Intel?

From the article:

Why is Intel manufacturing an Arm SoC as a reference platform? Probably because it's trying to attract external customers, and there's a whole lot more companies building Arm SoCs than there are firms pitching x86-64 processors.

They're not trying to build the next best thing. They're trying to attract customers.

I don't think Intel plans to make a product, but to prove they can build a working chip that's not one of their own design. Being ARM has fewer developmental risks than a RISC-V design and make validation easier.

>It should be RISC-V... who is in charge at Intel??

Why should it be that? What are your arguments?

  • oh, you are new to HN, because you would not need to ask such question if you were reading HN in the last few years...

    You can start on risc-v wikipedia page and/or on the official risc-v web site.

    • I would say they’re smart to invest in ARM over RISC-V for the time being. It was hard enough to get the industry to support x86 and ARM64. I mean the Windows transition is still not fully complete, and they’ve been trying since Windows 8.

      1 reply →

Intel demonstrated a RISC-V chip called Horse Creek two years ago.

  • If they manage to plug their microarch design on RISC-V ISA (yes, they will throw away a ton of things), they will be ready, performance-wise.

    This real hard part is transitioning the software stack, including games...