N
Nick Maclaren
Guest
In article <MPG.1b1fbc2b37d2a3ac98991d@news1.news.adelphia.net>,
KR Williams <krw@att.biz> writes:
|>
|> Kinda like 3x0? Yeah, it's kludgy by today's standards, but
|> it's not the $billions of development costs, nor support costs
|> that keep it going. $Billions in *applications* keep it going.
|> X86 is no different. This is why my bets are on AMD64, rather
|> than Opteron. History has shown that evolution works. Revolution
|> doesn't cut it.
Like the BBC Micro and IBM PC were evolutionary?
|> > Itanic is now ten years old and costs are in the billions. And sales
|> > are pathetic. Not even the big boys are any good at predicting the
|> > future.
|>
|> You completely misunderstood my comments. Intel bluffed, and
|> almost pulled it off. Others have noticed (both the bluff and
|> the failure to deliver). The market may not be wide open (that
|> revolution thing again), but it's there for those with chips (and
|> not $Billions) to push onto the table.
While they almost pulled it off, it wasn't a bluff. They really
thought that they could do it.
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
KR Williams <krw@att.biz> writes:
|>
|> Kinda like 3x0? Yeah, it's kludgy by today's standards, but
|> it's not the $billions of development costs, nor support costs
|> that keep it going. $Billions in *applications* keep it going.
|> X86 is no different. This is why my bets are on AMD64, rather
|> than Opteron. History has shown that evolution works. Revolution
|> doesn't cut it.
Like the BBC Micro and IBM PC were evolutionary?
|> > Itanic is now ten years old and costs are in the billions. And sales
|> > are pathetic. Not even the big boys are any good at predicting the
|> > future.
|>
|> You completely misunderstood my comments. Intel bluffed, and
|> almost pulled it off. Others have noticed (both the bluff and
|> the failure to deliver). The market may not be wide open (that
|> revolution thing again), but it's there for those with chips (and
|> not $Billions) to push onto the table.
While they almost pulled it off, it wasn't a bluff. They really
thought that they could do it.
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.