• @Crackhappy
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    139 months ago

    That’s an admirable goal, and I applaud the immense effort undertaken to make the OSS dream true.

    • Alex
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      129 months ago

      The ISA may be open but I’m pretty sure the microarchitecture will be totally proprietary. Even with a kick ass microarchitecture they may still struggle if they can’t use the latest process nodes to actually manufacture the chips.

      Having said that I suspect the main challenge RISCV is going to face is the software ecosystem. That stuff can take a decade to build and requires a degrees of cooperation between all the companies building chips.

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      I don’t think they’re doing this for oss reasons

      I don’t think they’re even required to publish the design, they could keep it proprietary

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        They’re not. They’re doing it because they fear being SOL if America/the West enforces more sanctions on things like ARM chips/designs or Intel, etc.

        And yes, IIRC RISC-V is MIT licensed or something close. Basically companies can take it and implement whatever on top and not have to contribute back.

    • qaz
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      9 months ago

      ARM is a type of RISCV, it makes sense their ARM division expands to other RISCV architectures.

      EDIT: ARM is a type of RISC, not RISCV

  • @Linkerbaan
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    9 months ago

    RiscV has been used for small specific tasks but running a whole OS on it still seems far fetched with so many libraries being unsupported. (yes it exists already but that is also very limited in functionality)