New start, or same old great stuff???
  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > I own both incarnations of Efika MX (both the smarttop and the smartbook).
    > [...] HW wise they are running any Sam 440 into the ground

    Just to illustrate what that statement means specifically, let me put this link to a benchmark comparison here:

    https://morph.zone/modules/newbb_plus/viewtopic.php?forum=3&topic_id=7675&start=164

    I know that the poor floating point result of the Efika MX was due to softfloat being used. Now that "the Linux that Genesi provides with the Efika MX really supports the HW", would you please run the nbench benchmark on your Efika MX with hardfloat enabled, so the comparison becomes more fair?

    > Today's fastest ARM CPU's kicks any old PPC based desktop/laptop's butt

    Today's fastest ARM CPUs are still slower than the PPC970 CPUs in most (i.e. 2.0+ GHz) G5 desktop machines. Geekbench example:

    Dual-core 2.5 GHz PowerMac G5: 2366 points
    Quad-core 1.4 GHz ARM Cortex-A9: 1811 points
    Dual-core 1.3 GHz Apple A6: 1572 points
    Dual-core 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Krait: 1540 points
    Dual-core 1.4 GHz ARM Cortex-A9: 1229 points

    http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench2/622225
    http://browser.primatelabs.com/android-benchmarks
    http://browser.primatelabs.com/ios-benchmarks

    > we have yet to see the peak of Cortex A9 generation of CPU's

    The world is already turning to Cortex-A15 performance generation of ARM CPUs with the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 (Krait core) and just recently the Apple A6 (custom core). I know that there're vendors behind the curve with their first Cortex-A9 chips still to come to mass market (like Freescale with i.MX6), but I doubt somewhat that they will be able to beat current Cortex-A9 chips in performance.


    Edit: corrected A6 clock rate.

    [ Edited by Andreas_Wolf 08.10.2012 - 21:54 ]
  • »24.09.12 - 10:59
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
    Yokemate of Keyboards
    takemehomegrandma
    Posts: 2720 from 2003/2/24
    Quote:

    would you please run the nbench benchmark on your Efika MX with hardfloat enabled, so the comparison becomes more fair?


    I know that making and maintaining these charts is your hobby Andreas, so please don't hate me for not bothering with this. I don't have the systems at hand, and both Efika MX (I don't know if Genesi still has any left in stock) and Sam 440 has lost its relevance anyway. My point wasn't about raw cpu power either, but about the impact of the clever use of integrated accelerator controllers for performance boosts, and the amount of real life usability you get in comparison to its low price. I think I paid $129 (or so) for my Smarttop, and it's a magnitude more usable than this guy's $1,500 AmigaOne 500 (yes I know, that's 460 and not 440, but anyway). No need to fall back to using Ibrowse for speed, Firefox works great, no need to recode videos to a different codec/resolution to be able to watch them, the Efika MX CPU happily decodes and renders most codecs in 720p HD (it actually can decode 1080p streams but not render them at a 1080 HD resolution screen (only 720) due to a stupid bottle neck in the CPU that was removed in the i.MX53 version). All this on a rather bulky Linux distro that doesn't come close to MorphOS's lean elegance.

    Quote:

    Today's fastest ARM CPUs are still slower than the PPC970 CPUs in most (i.e. 2.0+ GHz) G5 desktop machines.


    Yes I know, but this is a fact that may very well be changing as we speak, at least if we speak slooooow enough... :-P ;-)

    (But it happened quite some time ago if you consider the *entire* meaning of my sentence that you quoted: "Today's fastest ARM CPU's kicks any old PPC based desktop/laptop's butt, especially so when you add the price tag to the equation" ;-))

    Quote:

    > we have yet to see the peak of Cortex A9 generation of CPU's

    The world is already turning to Cortex-A15 performance generation of ARM CPUs with the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 (Krait core) and just recently the Apple A6 (custom core). I know that there're vendors behind the curve with their first Cortex-A9 chips still to come to mass market (like Freescale with i.MX6), but I doubt somewhat that they will be able to beat current Cortex-A9 chips in performance.


    This was my point exactly, far from every chip manufacturer settles with just the bare core reference design provided by ARM, many consider that to be merely a starting point and pour a lot of engineering into their own chip design to pimp it up significantly in various ways. We have seen that many times with older ARM core designs, and this will of course continue in the future as well with new core designs. :-)
    MorphOS is Amiga done right! :-)
    MorphOS NG will be AROS done right! :-)
  • »24.09.12 - 12:01
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
    Yokemate of Keyboards
    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    >>> All X86 processors require some companion chipset.

    >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vortex86 does not.

    > Interesting. Missed that one, but then I don't think a
    > single core i586 would be all that powerful.

    There's also this since April 2012:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atom_(system_on_chip)

    Compared to Power Architecture SoCs, those Atom SoCs seem to lack things like SATA and Ethernet, but then they have 2D+3D GPU.
  • »24.09.12 - 12:13
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    >> would you please run the nbench benchmark on your Efika MX with
    >> hardfloat enabled, so the comparison becomes more fair?

    > please don't hate me for not bothering with this. I don't have the
    > systems at hand

    Pity. But I can live with that I guess ;-)

    >>> Today's fastest ARM CPU's kicks any old PPC based desktop/laptop's butt

    >> Today's fastest ARM CPUs are still slower than the PPC970 CPUs in
    >> most (i.e. 2.0+ GHz) G5 desktop machines.

    > it happened quite some time ago if you consider the *entire* meaning
    > of my sentence that you quoted: "Today's fastest ARM CPU's kicks any
    > old PPC based desktop/laptop's butt, especially so when you add the
    > price tag to the equation" ;-))

    Appending "especially when..." to a statement means the statement is true also without the appendix, and *even more so* with the appendix. Your statement however is false without the appendix, so what you probably meant to say (I can't be sure though) is "as long as" instead of "especially when".

    > far from every chip manufacturer settles with just the bare core
    > reference design provided by ARM

    Yes, and we can even quantify it exactly: regarding ARMv7, there're exactly 3 companies that do their own core(s) from scratch instead just licensing them from ARM Ltd. These are Marvell (Sheeva PJ4/PJ4B), Qualcomm (Scorpion, Krait) and Apple (A6 core).
    Btw, I don't think "reference design" is an apt term for what is happening here. It's not like ARM ISA licensees take a core design from ARM Ltd. and try to enhance it or adapt it for their needs. In fact, they develop their own microarchitecture from scratch with the ARM ISA as specification which the microarchitecture is an implementation of. This is in contrast to the ARM core licensees who take and use cores from ARM Ltd. as is.
  • »24.09.12 - 12:56
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    takemehomegrandma
    Posts: 2720 from 2003/2/24
    Yes the business model of licensing IP to others to allow/enable them to make their own CPU's has definitely been key to ARM's success, and will to a major part be the explanation to the upcoming booming of the architecture (it may seem like it already has happened, but I think we have seen nothing yet). It's a success saga, and it's only at the beginning. :-)
    MorphOS is Amiga done right! :-)
    MorphOS NG will be AROS done right! :-)
  • »24.09.12 - 13:10
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  • Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Crumb
    Posts: 730 from 2003/2/24
    From: aGaS & CUAZ Al...
    @amigadave

    X64 for me. I'm interested in desktop computing. And an i7 is way cheaper and faster than any arm stuff you can buy. Some time ago I saw a toshiba i7-laptop with 4 cores, 666Euros. Try to beat that with a top of the line ARM. In addition to that I could use Virtual Machines and save money and space. Running x64 emulators on ARM would be pretty pathethic. I don't need to spend thousands on a decent peecee, you can have it for the same price that ARM gear but X64 will run rings around any ARM machine. ARM is ok for kids' toys to play angry birds on a 70€ tablet but as soon as you buy a low-end peecee (let's say 300€) then ARM is pretty useless, slow and lacks apps. X64 is fast, cheap, flexible and more standard and we'll always have millions of available and useful machines. Even an old AMD XP1800 running at 1400Mhz runs rings around ARM stuff. Try to compile, try to launch eclipse, ARM is a toy and will continue in that state for some years. We are in 2012 and I can't see commercial ARM products that beat Apple Quad-G5 in speed (I mean doing real work, not some ramdon benchmark comparing a recent gfx core with an old Radeon9600
  • »24.09.12 - 21:58
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  • Jim
  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Jim
    Posts: 4977 from 2009/1/28
    From: Delaware, USA
    Andreas_Wolf,
    Quote:

    There's also this since April 2012:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atom_(system_on_chip)

    Compared to Power Architecture SoCs, those Atom SoCs seem to lack things like SATA and Ethernet, but then they have 2D+3D GPU.



    I didn't know those were out yet.
    As ARM shift up to tablets, netbooks and desktops, Intel shrinks the X86 Atom for smartphone use.
    Neat.
    Atom isn't that powerful, but I'm sure its more then a match for the i586 you previously pointed to.

    How would e6500 cored processors fare in this comparison?
    "Never attribute to malice what can more readily explained by incompetence"
  • »24.09.12 - 22:44
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
    Yokemate of Keyboards
    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > I can't see commercial ARM products that beat Apple Quad-G5 in speed
    > (I mean doing real work, not some ramdon benchmark comparing a recent
    > gfx core with an old Radeon9600

    Then I guess you find Geekbench results meaningful as it ignores the GPU completely. And btw, quad-G5 Mac and Radeon 9600 don't go together usually ;-)
  • »24.09.12 - 23:40
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > Atom isn't that powerful, but I'm sure its more then a match for the i586 you
    > previously pointed to.
    > How would e6500 cored processors fare in this comparison?

    e6500 is certainly above Atom in performance.
  • »24.09.12 - 23:50
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  • Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Crumb
    Posts: 730 from 2003/2/24
    From: aGaS & CUAZ Al...
    Quote:

    Then I guess you find Geekbench results meaningful as it ignores the GPU completely.


    GeekBench is funny: OSX is 2000 points slower than Windows in cpu hungry tasks it seems. E.g.: i7-3820QM 2700 MHz. That's the power of two G5/1.6Ghz, I guess there's something badly programmed (OSX or Geekbench, who knows). BTW iPad5 points like a dual G5/1.8ghz I would prefer to see real life tests instead of semi-synthethic tests. Let's say building one or various entire projects simultaneusly or rendering, scaling 100 pictures and applying filters,... I don't see many of these wunderbar ARM high-end desktop machines available anywhere, where do I plugin various SATA HDs? can I fit a modern PCIe gfx card?

    Since ARM is so great can I have an ATX board that beats or even emulates last QuadG5? Since arm is so cheap, so powerful and so widespread it should be easy to find a dozen of boards that can be bought in almost all european countries, right?

    [ Edited by Crumb 25.09.2012 - 00:51 ]
  • »25.09.12 - 00:50
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  • Order of the Butterfly
    Order of the Butterfly
    minator
    Posts: 365 from 2003/3/28
    Quote:

    Besides, most ARM devices are locked, proprietary ones with very limited options of running third party SW.


    Things like phones are locked but there are also an ever growing number of cheap dev boards which are not locked to anything. There's so many now I gave up trying to follow them.

    Once the A15s arrive you'll see them appearing on them to. That'll give you the power of a G5 close to the price of an Efika.


    Quote:

    Is ARM hardware cheaply available?


    Cheap is an understatement. Look up "cloud stick" on eBay, ARM computer for £30!
  • »25.09.12 - 01:05
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  • Jim
  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Jim
    Posts: 4977 from 2009/1/28
    From: Delaware, USA
    Andreas_Wolf,
    Quote:

    e6500 is certainly above Atom in performance.


    Wow! I really worded that one badly.

    What I meant was in relation to the 970 and the ARM CPUs you were comparing.
    "Never attribute to malice what can more readily explained by incompetence"
  • »25.09.12 - 02:32
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    >> e6500 is certainly above Atom in performance.

    > What I meant was in relation to the 970 and the ARM CPUs you were comparing.

    I really don't want to hazard a guess here as to how e6500-based chips would compare to the PPC970 or to chips with Cortex-A9 cores or Krait cores or to the Apple A6 in Geekbench. And I guess we will never see Geekbench scores for e6500 anyway as there's no Linux/PPC version of it.
  • »25.09.12 - 08:41
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > iPad5 points like a dual G5/1.8ghz

    Yes, minator already mentioned this in another thread.

    > where do I plugin various SATA HDs?

    I don't know about "various", but SATA isn't necessarily a problem any more:

    https://morph.zone/modules/newbb_plus/viewtopic.php?forum=3&topic_id=7675&start=272

    That was 4 months ago, so there's probably even more by now.

    > can I fit a modern PCIe gfx card?

    While there're various ARMv7 SoCs with integrated PCIe controller, I've yet to come across a board with ARMv7 SoC and PCIe slot.

    > can I have an ATX board that beats or even emulates last QuadG5?

    To quote myself from this thread:

    "Today's fastest ARM CPUs are still slower than the PPC970 CPUs in most (i.e. 2.0+ GHz) G5 desktop machines."

    > it should be easy to find a dozen of boards that can be
    > bought in almost all european countries, right?

    Right. You could try to start there:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_single-board_computers#ARM_based
  • »25.09.12 - 09:38
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  • Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
    Crumb
    Posts: 730 from 2003/2/24
    From: aGaS & CUAZ Al...
    Code:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_single-board_computers#ARM_based


    Most of these boards are pretty low-end and are fun to play with but these aren't a real replacement for desktop systems IMHO.
  • »25.09.12 - 10:10
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > these aren't a real replacement for desktop systems IMHO.

    True. I guess that real desktop systems (i.e. what we understand by this term) will emerge with Cortex-A15 in 2013 at the earliest. It may even take as long as initiatives like nVidia's Project Denver (2014 or later) to bring ARM (ARMv8 in this case) really to the desktop. We'll see.
  • »25.09.12 - 11:12
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  • Jim
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    Jim
    Posts: 4977 from 2009/1/28
    From: Delaware, USA
    Considering the machines we are used to using, a Cortex-A9 might be adequate.
    "Never attribute to malice what can more readily explained by incompetence"
  • »25.09.12 - 20:56
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    takemehomegrandma
    Posts: 2720 from 2003/2/24
    @Jim

    Quote:

    Considering the machines we are used to using, a Cortex-A9 might be adequate.


    "Adequate", quite true, it will do what most people wants/needs to do with their computer (in fact, it *already does*, for millions of people around the world, albeit not in the shape of a "desktop"), but that's not what Crumb is talking about. I feel he wants workstation or "Gaming PC" performance, or thereabout at least. But it's not like his PPC machine that he is running MorphOS on comes close to Core i7 anyway, and a move to ARM would definitely be a step upwards from today, at least when/if that would happen (i.e. not today, or tomorrow, or this year, or...)


    @Andreas

    Quote:

    I guess that real desktop systems (i.e. what we understand by this term) will emerge with Cortex-A15 in 2013 at the earliest. It may even take as long as initiatives like nVidia's Project Denver (2014 or later) to bring ARM (ARMv8 in this case) really to the desktop. We'll see.


    Personally, I would bet on the latter. Not because Cortex-A15 per se wouldn't be enough, performance wise, but I think most chip/motherboard manufacturers will still aim for handhelds, smart-TV's, etc, with this core. And of course servers, since this is a pronounced target application for this core AFAIK, at least from ARM themselves. IIRC the nVidia president pronounced their "Denver" to be a "x86 killer" though, and I think they will make Denver based CPU's for all kinds of applications, including desktop and servers (and *I still* wouldn't be surprised if at least one of the upcoming console platforms will use this, most probable the new X-box, for several reasons).

    I think we will see a fork in what we perceive as "desktop" in a close future. Most people (both professionally and at home) are definitely using over-performing computers for their computing tasks today. People are using core i5's and i7's mainly to type mails, browsing the web and office kind of applications. Expensive and power hungry CPU's, costing corporations and families thousands of dollars, completely in vain, when (as Jim said) a Cortex A9 could easily do the job they needs, for a fraction of the resources (both investment and running resources).

    So with a "fork" I mean that I believe that the market for gaming PC's and workstations will continue its rapid hunt for performance and "marketing numbers" to advertise, while the "general use PC" will shrink in both PCB size (it won't need to be expandable, hence less slots), power consumption, performance and price. I think ARM will play a role here, and while I think Microsoft's agenda with ARM is first and foremost to meet Apple/Samsung/Google/etc in the handheld/tablet/smart-TV/whatever consumer markets, I also think they have more on their agenda with Windows 8 for ARM than just that, at least I think they want to open up some options. I think they are very familiar with nVidia's (and others as well) agenda with ARM, completely unknown to us of course, and I think they are "playing both sides" right now (both x86 and ARM) to see how things will fold. I think there is a bigger turmoil than ever in the industry right now, where paradigm shifts *definitely* can happen.

    At least this is *my* opinion! ;-)

    That said (again), I wouldn't mind MorphOS going x86, if it could be done in a smart way!

    :-)
    MorphOS is Amiga done right! :-)
    MorphOS NG will be AROS done right! :-)
  • »25.09.12 - 22:24
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > Considering the machines we are used to using, a Cortex-A9 might be adequate.

    I don't think a 1.5 GHz Cortex-A9 would be a match for the 1.5 GHz G4 in my Mac mini. A 1.5 GHz Krait maybe, but not Cortex-A9. Of course, this would also depend on whether MorphOS on such ARM CPU could make use of more than one CPU core. But then, if it could, there're also dual-G4 PowerMacs which are already supported by MorphOS with one core. So I think, for me to consider it as an adequate match (or even improvement), the ARM chip must be faster than my G4 on a per-core basis.
  • »25.09.12 - 23:26
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
    Yokemate of Keyboards
    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > Denver based CPU's [...] and *I still* wouldn't be surprised if at least one of the upcoming
    > console platforms will use this, most probable the new X-box, for several reasons

    I'm quite confident that Project Denver will be too late to both the next XBox party and the PS4 party.
  • »25.09.12 - 23:50
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  • Order of the Butterfly
    Order of the Butterfly
    minator
    Posts: 365 from 2003/3/28
    At the moment if you want high end desktop performance you have no choice but Intel and AMD. I run a few apps that can easily max out even high end CPUs so I just got myself a high end laptop with a rather nice quad core i7.

    The apps are Photo editing, Movie editing and Synth plug-ins.

    One of those apps (photo editing*) is actually disc bound and I suspect movie editing* is too - even with an SSD. Only the synth plugin is purely CPU bound.

    *In both cases this is exporting of the finished photos or movie. This will max out the processor but it will then spend more time accessing the disc.

    ARM parts are mainly designed for mobile so are limited by the power available which tends to be very low. This however is changing. The A15 is designed to handle higher clocks and it'll be appearing in servers where you get wall socket power. Build them on a high speed process and they should be pretty potent. They wont be top end i7 level but they'll be a lot faster than today's ARM cores.

    In the mean time I guess you'll have to do with the 2GHz dual A9 Rockchip just announced (shipping this year).
  • »26.09.12 - 00:01
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  • Order of the Butterfly
    Order of the Butterfly
    minator
    Posts: 365 from 2003/3/28
    BTW what does desktop mean anyway? I've used a laptop as my main machine for a decade now. Slots? Who needs them?
  • »26.09.12 - 00:12
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
    Yokemate of Keyboards
    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > 2GHz dual A9 Rockchip just announced (shipping this year)

    I hope this will be more real than the 2 GHz announced by Nufront (delivered as 1.5 GHz) ;-)
  • »26.09.12 - 00:13
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  • Yokemate of Keyboards
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    Andreas_Wolf
    Posts: 12085 from 2003/5/22
    From: Germany
    > what does desktop mean anyway? [...] Slots? Who needs them?

    Crumb says he does, for PCIe graphics cards, and multiple SATA ports for HDDs :-)
  • »26.09.12 - 00:16
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    takemehomegrandma
    Posts: 2720 from 2003/2/24
    @Andreas

    Quote:

    I'm quite confident that Project Denver will be too late to both the next XBox party and the PS4 party.


    Smoke and mirrors...

    I bet!

    ;-)
    MorphOS is Amiga done right! :-)
    MorphOS NG will be AROS done right! :-)
  • »26.09.12 - 00:29
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