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Findecanoryesterday at 11:39 PM1 replyview on HN

Because today, getting a fast CPU out it isn't as much an engineering issue as it is about getting the investment for hiring a world-class fab.

The most promising RISC-V companies today have not set out to compete directly with Intel, AMD, Apple or Samsung, but are targeting a niche such as AI, HPC and/or high-end embedded such as automotive.

And you can bet that Qualcomm has RISC-V designs in-house, but only making ARM chips right now because ARM is where the market for smartphone and desktop SoCs is. Once Google starts allowing RVA23 on Android / ChromeOS, the flood gates will open.


Replies

adgjlsfhk1yesterday at 11:45 PM

It's very much both. You need millions of dollars for the fab, but you also need ~5 years to get 3 generations of cpus out (to fix all the performance bugs you find in the first two)