I have to wonder how pressing it will be to upgrade to 64 bit . I
haven't heard anything about xp-64 bit yet, as to is it worth it.
If I had to bet, I'd say the road block to going beyond 64 bit is OS,
and software. As you pointed out multi-cores could get large and I'm
sure they could easily parallell several of those cores to accomplish
128 bit or something similar to the 128 bit memory channel.
I saw a show where they have made processors in the lab working on
photons. Why they haven't made the jump to production is a mystery.
Likely cost for one. They'd certainly use less power and dissapate
less heat.
These rapid changes, such as dead ending so many sockets, will have to
put a strain on parts of the industry. And of concern will it cause
some loss of market share. I recently heard AMD may have surpassed
Intel, and brings some sense as to why there isn't a tremendous price
difference anymore.
Backward engineer? I can't point to any specific stories of AMD doing
this although there is one about Compaq and how it came into being.
Darwinian, with a healthy dose of natural selection. When AMD started
with the technological change allowing rating and true speed, Intel
probably fell off their chairs laughing when they first heard of it.
Laughing probably ceased quickly and they stupidly pushed foward with
RDRAM. AMD not wanting to pay exhorbitant prices for it and the
technology and that many RAM manufacturers were left out, they joined
forces and came up with DDR. Intel certainly came to that late. And
I'd bet that was the problem with one series of Nvidia cards. I saw
an interview with owner, he admitted they had memory problems and had
jumped ahead of technological capabilites. To get the product out the
door it sounded like they had to slow the GPU so the memory design
could keep up and were abandoning that design in the next series
release. This was at a time when Nvidia was in bed with MS, Intel.
This strongly suggests that architecture was similar to RDRAM.
Nvidia since jumped from that ship and ATI is back on, which is where
it was when Nvidia took the lead. And may have taken the lead again.
This pattern seems to suggest a fundamental problem with that
relationship of partnering. Now it is true that AMD has had that
relationship with MS but I bet they did it in a limited way, just to
ensure their processors were able to work with MS code.
A short time ago, I thought DDR was the next to die on the
evolutionary plan, to be replaced with DDR2. But the last time I
checked, a few weeks ago, only Intel platforms use it. I wish I knew
more about the differences, is it really better or was this some way
for Intel getting around paying fees to the developers of DDR, which
includes AMD. And are they hoping they reap profits from AMD with
DDR2 technology?
BTW, it should be interesting to see how much cache will be available
with these multicore's. Overcoming heat problems, we might see 32M of
cache in the next few years, which seems wild when thinking of how
much RAM was considered necessary to run W95, first 32bit. Of course
we could go way back before that. I still have a machine laying
around here that was considered a Lamborghini in its day. Very
impressive was it's boot time, it didn't use a hard drive and it's OS
booted from RAM. A whopping 384K if I remember correctly.
Unfortunately, it didn't get the added RAM which would make it
capable of running Wordperfect DOS.
Back on track for this MOBO, I got a couple of blue screens last
night. Pretty sure it is software issue and I'm off to see what I can
learn.
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