top | item 46010363 (no title) richardwhiuk | 3 months ago You can’t buy an M3 chip on its own discuss order hn newest madeofpalk|3 months ago Why can’t someone else make one? tonyarkles|3 months ago That’s very much the trick. Apple is actually exceptionally good at making CPUs. Look at these single-thread benchmarks: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/single-thread/ Similarly, if you look for the M4 in this list and then look for other ARM chips, you’ll have to look quite a ways down the list: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/multithread/mobile load replies (1) sitharus|3 months ago Because it’s a proprietary design? You’d have to reverse-engineer the whole chip, which is really hard to do on that process node load replies (1)
madeofpalk|3 months ago Why can’t someone else make one? tonyarkles|3 months ago That’s very much the trick. Apple is actually exceptionally good at making CPUs. Look at these single-thread benchmarks: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/single-thread/ Similarly, if you look for the M4 in this list and then look for other ARM chips, you’ll have to look quite a ways down the list: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/multithread/mobile load replies (1) sitharus|3 months ago Because it’s a proprietary design? You’d have to reverse-engineer the whole chip, which is really hard to do on that process node load replies (1)
tonyarkles|3 months ago That’s very much the trick. Apple is actually exceptionally good at making CPUs. Look at these single-thread benchmarks: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/single-thread/ Similarly, if you look for the M4 in this list and then look for other ARM chips, you’ll have to look quite a ways down the list: https://www.cpubenchmark.net/multithread/mobile load replies (1)
sitharus|3 months ago Because it’s a proprietary design? You’d have to reverse-engineer the whole chip, which is really hard to do on that process node load replies (1)
madeofpalk|3 months ago
tonyarkles|3 months ago
sitharus|3 months ago