top | item 30443024 (no title) ojn | 4 years ago Yeah, Intel clearly has no interest in helping RISC-V succeed.https://www.zdnet.com/article/intel-invests-in-open-source-r... discuss order hn newest gary_0|4 years ago Intel is well aware that their x86 IP isn't the secret sauce it used to be. If RISC-V takes over the world, they won't be caught off-guard. jabl|4 years ago Maybe, but I think the more immediate motivations are- Get customers for their fab services division, now that they're making a serious push to fab 3rd party chips.- Help RISC-V threaten ARM at the low end, thus taking away attention and resources ARM could otherwise use to compete with x86 servers. unknown|4 years ago [deleted]
gary_0|4 years ago Intel is well aware that their x86 IP isn't the secret sauce it used to be. If RISC-V takes over the world, they won't be caught off-guard. jabl|4 years ago Maybe, but I think the more immediate motivations are- Get customers for their fab services division, now that they're making a serious push to fab 3rd party chips.- Help RISC-V threaten ARM at the low end, thus taking away attention and resources ARM could otherwise use to compete with x86 servers.
jabl|4 years ago Maybe, but I think the more immediate motivations are- Get customers for their fab services division, now that they're making a serious push to fab 3rd party chips.- Help RISC-V threaten ARM at the low end, thus taking away attention and resources ARM could otherwise use to compete with x86 servers.
gary_0|4 years ago
jabl|4 years ago
- Get customers for their fab services division, now that they're making a serious push to fab 3rd party chips.
- Help RISC-V threaten ARM at the low end, thus taking away attention and resources ARM could otherwise use to compete with x86 servers.
unknown|4 years ago
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