Considering having the ARM architecture is only getting more popular. I was wondering your guy’s opinions on whether x86 will be dead in 10 years.
And now Intel's talking about "X86-S" with some of the legacy stuff removed (requires 64-bit OS, rings 1 and 2 removed, etc).intel tried to replace x86 with ia-64 itanium family and yet x86 evolved with x86-64 and ia-64 is where now. Discontinued
Windows 64-bit doesn't support 16-bit anyways, so no huge loss.And now Intel's talking about "X86-S" with some of the legacy stuff removed (no longer boots into 16-bit, rings 1 and 2 removed, etc).
Even if it was a loss, you could still just use a 16-bit-capable CPU as they're unlikely to go away any time soon. I've been told that Intel still sells the 286, for example (although Wikipedia lists it as discontinued, so I wonder who's right - the reference it gives seems to be someone's personal site).Windows 64-bit doesn't support 16-bit anyways, so no huge loss.
Even if it was a loss, you could still just use a 16-bit-capable CPU as they're unlikely to go away any time soon. I've been told that Intel still sells the 286, for example (although Wikipedia lists it as discontinued, so I wonder who's right - the reference it gives seems to be someone's personal site).
Edit: I'm going to put that one down as false; Intel's site doesn't list it, so I'm guessing I was fed incorrect information.
Yeah, this would change the calculus quite a bit. I assume the OP meant fully compatible x86 as it’s always been but I think they could do much better if they strip it down and modernize it. The legacy cruft is just an albatross around their necks.And now Intel's talking about "X86-S" with some of the legacy stuff removed (requires 64-bit OS, rings 1 and 2 removed, etc).
Yes, yes I did 😃 I didn’t learn about x86-S until today, interesting that they’re modernizing the architecture, I’ll have to look up moreI assume the OP meant fully compatible
Will x86 be dead in a decade?
Outdated and dead are very different things. It's arguably already outdated, but it's a long, looong way from being dead.Will the x86 architecture be fully outdated in 10 years?
The details are here. Beware: Technical (there's a summary of the changes on page 10).Yes, yes I did 😃 I didn’t learn about x86-S until today, interesting that they’re modernizing the architecture, I’ll have to look up more
IA-64 kinda died when AMD64 came outI wish Intel had kept at Itanium continue optimizing it even as a research project.
I read that. I'm not sure if I like it or not, but ring 0 and ring 3 are the most important. (plus the hypervisor ring) It would run most of the business stuff I know about. Only the odd hardware/driver situation would trip it up, and that's what ebay is for. (replacement parts.And now Intel's talking about "X86-S" with some of the legacy stuff removed (requires 64-bit OS, rings 1 and 2 removed, etc).