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Comment by boredatoms

21 hours ago

Maybe it helps get government contracts

“We’re standards compliant”

It's not like ARM and x86 are standardised by ISO either.

  • Governments seem to care about "self-sufficiency" a lot more these days, especially after what's happening in both China and the US right now.

    If the choice is between an architecture owned, patented and managed by a single company domiciled in a foreign country, versus one which is an international standard and has multiple competing vendors, the latter suddenly seems a lot more attractive.

    Price and performance don't matter that much. Governments are a lot less price-sensitive than consumers (and even businesses), they're willing to spend money to achieve their goals.

  • This is exactly what makes this such an interesting development. Standardization is part of the process of the CPU industry becoming a mature industry not dependent on the whims of individual companies. Boring, yes, but also stable.

  • Yes, and they're both massively debated and criticised, to the point that the industry developed Risk-V in the firstplace. Not to mention the rugpull licensing ARM pulled a few years back.

  • Yes, but if 30 years ago ARM had an ISO standard they could point to, that would have probably helped with government adoption?

    (It's still a trade-off, because standards also cost community time and effort.)