• Portada
    • Recientes
    • Usuarios
    • Registrarse
    • Conectarse

    Open processors are gaining followers

    Programado Fijo Cerrado Movido Procesadores, placas base y memorias
    7 Mensajes 5 Posters 46.1k Visitas
    Cargando más mensajes
    • Más antiguo a más nuevo
    • Más nuevo a más antiguo
    • Mayor número de Votos
    Responder
    • Responder como tema
    Accede para responder
    Este tema ha sido borrado. Solo los usuarios que tengan privilegios de administración de temas pueden verlo.
    • Portada HLP Desconectado
      Portada HL
      Última edición por

      In a world dominated by intellectual property, some companies are beginning to consider adopting open ISAs to avoid having to sign contracts with dozens of developers and save on development costs. The most popular open architectures are Power, MIPS, and RISC-V.

      View entry

      1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
      • GallinaG Desconectado
        Gallina
        Última edición por

        I still remember the processor that Linus's company released that changed code as needed:
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmeta

        Garfield

        Comentario en portada de un gallina anónimo

        1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
        • GallinaG Desconectado
          Gallina
          Última edición por

          I also remember the expectations of this processor in the late 90s. It was featured quite a bit in PC Actual. I believe that today Transmeta is dedicated to selling IPS. What a fiasco that was.

          Comentario en portada de un gallina anónimo

          cobitoC 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
          • cobitoC Desconectado
            cobito Administrador @Gallina
            Última edición por

            @Gallina That was the Transmeta Crusoe. They were carried by what could be said to be the embryos of today's tablets and small laptops. If I remember correctly, the failure was in one of their caches.

            Regarding the news, let's see if it's true that some tech giant puts real resources into one of those architectures. It would be very interesting to be able to load the chips onto an FPGA to play with it and who knows, maybe something like Linux ends up happening to one of them.

            Toda la actualidad en la portada de Hardlimit
            Mis cacharros

            hlbm signature

            kynesK 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 1
            • kynesK Desconectado
              kynes Veteranos HL @cobito
              Última edición por

              @cobito It was not just a matter of caches. The Crusoe used X86 translation to a VLIW language, and if I remember correctly, they wanted to execute four instructions in parallel, while the Efficeon, the second generation, wanted to execute eight instructions in parallel. In theory, they should work very well, but as with everything, real-time interpretation does not always work as one wants, and you can't always package eight instructions in parallel, especially considering that many functions that run on processors are not parallelizable.

              Today it might have worked better, with multithreading programming having developed a lot, but back then it was a suicide and they ended up going bankrupt.

              hlbm signature

              garfieldG 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 2
              • garfieldG Desconectado
                garfield Veteranos HL @kynes
                Última edición por

                @kynes said in Open processors are gaining followers:

                Today it might have worked better, since multi-threaded programming has developed a lot, but back then it was a suicide and they ended up going bankrupt.

                I think that's where their problem was. They were visionaries, but the technology we have now didn't exist. The 8 instructions in parallel, will that be what AMD wants to use now to increase their performance in the ryzen 3?

                hlbm signature

                kynesK 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 1
                • kynesK Desconectado
                  kynes Veteranos HL @garfield
                  Última edición por

                  @garfield said in Open processors are gaining followers:

                  @kynes said in Open processors are gaining followers:

                  Today it might have worked better, since multi-threaded programming has developed a lot, but back then it was a suicide and they ended up going bankrupt.

                  I think that's where their problem was. They were visionaries, but the technology that we have now didn't exist. The thing with 8 instructions in parallel, is that what AMD wants to use now to increase their performance in the ryzen 3?

                  From what I've read, not exactly. I think what AMD wants to do is what IBM does with the Power, like a hyperthreading of 4 threads per core to take advantage of the units that are not active, and widen the cores with more decoding units, integer, floating point... not 2 as until now. They are still 64-bit instructions that internally distributes them and executes them as it can.

                  Transmeta's thing was more heavy, their instructions internally were 256 bits, to package 8 of 32 bits per cycle, so if they couldn't parallelize in the interpreter, they put nop instructions to fill in.

                  hlbm signature

                  1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 2
                  • 1 / 1
                  • First post
                    Last post

                  Foreros conectados [Conectados hoy]

                  1 usuarios activos (1 miembros y 0 invitados).
                  febesin, pAtO,

                  Estadísticas de Hardlimit

                  Los hardlimitianos han creado un total de 543.5k posts en 62.9k hilos.
                  Somos un total de 34.9k miembros registrados.
                  roymendez ha sido nuestro último fichaje.
                  El récord de usuarios en linea fue de 123 y se produjo el Thu Jan 15 2026.