Qualcomm brought a company named Nuvia, which are ex-Apple engineers that help designed the M series Apple silicon chips to produce Oryon which exceeds Apple’s M2 Max in single threaded benchmarks.

The impression I get is than these are for PCs and laptops

I’ve been following the development of Asahi Linux (Linux on the M series MacBooks) with this new development there’s some exciting times to come.

  • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
    link
    English
    318 months ago

    I’d expect them to start around 1k. Not many people are going to be buying these devices so there’s no economies of scale.

    Also I love how qualcomm announced this CPU and a day later Apple releases the M3 which is finally a real upgrade from the M1.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      98 months ago

      Lots of tech companies might be interested. For example, at my work we are now stuck half way between x64 and arm, both on the server side and on the developers side (Linux users are on x64 and Mac users are on arm). While multiarch OCI/docker containers minimize the pains caused by this, it would still be easier to go back to a single architecture.

      • @Aux
        link
        -28 months ago

        Qualcomm chip won’t be binary compatible with Apple chips, so nothing will change for you.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          38 months ago

          If you build a docker image on an ARM Mac OS with default settings it will happily run on Linux on ARM, the same for a Go app compiled with GOOS="linux", for example. Of course you can always fix the issues that pop up by also specifying the architecture, but people often forget, and in the case of docker it has significant performance penalties.

    • Horsey
      link
      fedilink
      78 months ago

      I’m sure Qualcomm knew what they were doing