Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-18 Thread tim.laurid...@gmail.com
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 9:15 AM, drago01 drag...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 6:42 AM, tim.laurid...@gmail.com
 tim.laurid...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  [...]
 
  Linux is about choices

 No it isn't:
 http://www.redhat.com/archives/rhl-devel-list/2008-January/msg00861.html

 (I do disagree with Kevin though).
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Choices have consequences, who have to live with, so having choices it not
the same as you can get everything you want :)

If people choose to spend time to build Fedora on a arch and getting the
work done, it is not up to me to judge there work to be a waste of time,
because I don't care about this arch.

Fedora is made by contributors and they decide what they want to spend
there time on, but they don't decide what other contributor will spend
there time on.

Tim
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-16 Thread Richard W.M. Jones
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 06:42:45AM +0200, tim.laurid...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 1:57 AM, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.atwrote:
 
  Hi,
 
  I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom)
  based smartphone:
  http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/
 
  So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
  ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
  instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
  worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
  Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.
 
  So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
  filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
  performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
  architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
  for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of
  the
  legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
  architectures are for.
 
 Kevin Kofler
 
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 troll mode
 Why do we waste time on Linux, when we all just can use Windows, the
 desktop market leader 
 /troll mode
 
 Linux is about choices and is driven by people by by people with passions
 for something, even if not what every body else think is importent.
 So telling people to don't waste time on something they care about, Is
 wrong in so many ways.

Damn right!  I'm running Linux (not Fedora, sadly) on my OpenRISC FPGA.

Rich.

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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread drago01
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 6:42 AM, tim.laurid...@gmail.com
tim.laurid...@gmail.com wrote:

 [...]

 Linux is about choices

No it isn't: 
http://www.redhat.com/archives/rhl-devel-list/2008-January/msg00861.html

(I do disagree with Kevin though).
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Peter Robinson
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 12:57 AM, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.at wrote:
 Hi,

 I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom)
 based smartphone:
 http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

 So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
 ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
 instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
 worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
 Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

Phones have never been a target for Fedora ARM so the point you make
is completely irrelevant and doesn't change any of our aims or goals.
Intel has been producing Atom processors aimed at phones for a couple
of generations of processor now.

Peter
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Peter Robinson
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 1:08 AM, Matthew Garrett mj...@srcf.ucam.org wrote:
 On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 01:57:18AM +0200, Kevin Kofler wrote:

 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

 If Fedora ARM is currently causing you problems then please do point out
 the specifics. But if it's not, then why do you expect it to get any
 worse if it becomes a primary architecture?

I don't see why it would have as we've not reported a single bug to
him. He's only ever had one point and that is wrt build time and that
has already been addressed in the guidelines produced for Secondary
Arch promotion.

Peter
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Simone Caronni
On 15 June 2012 01:57, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.at wrote:
 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

Servers are moving to ARM as well, HP and Dell for example:

http://h17007.www1.hp.com/us/en/iss/110111.aspx
http://en.community.dell.com/techcenter/high-performance-computing/b/weblog/archive/2012/06/01/better-density-less-power-consumption-at-heart-of-dell-s-arm-based-ecosystem-building-program.aspx

We could guess RHEL 7 will build on the ARM development in Fedora.

And I personally would really like to run something that's not x86.

Regards,
--Simone


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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Jaroslav Reznik
- Original Message -
 Hi,
 
 I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86
 (Atom)
 based smartphone:
 http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/
 
 So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to
 defeat
 ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
 instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are
 still
 worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's
 single-core
 Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.
 
 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end
 architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a
 need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid
 of the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

Intel promises mobile CPUs for several years and it's still a huge
fail...

My Intel based tablet has a fan (and it's not fun). I have to admit, I 
prefer x86 arch as it's easier to develop/work with but not in mobile
world yet. 

R.

 Kevin Kofler
 
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Peter Jones

On 06/14/2012 07:57 PM, Kevin Kofler wrote:

Hi,

I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom)
based smartphone:
http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

So even smartphones are going x86 now.


It's probably best not to extrapolate the extent of a trend from a single
point.

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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-15 Thread Przemek Klosowski

On 06/14/2012 07:57 PM, Kevin Kofler wrote:


So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
performance increases.


There are three axis to this 3D space: performance, energy efficiency 
(MIPS per Watt or, rather, useful computation per Joule), and price. 
Intel did wonderfully on the first axis, but lags ARM persistently on 
the remaining two, and ARM seem to be catching up on performance.


Watch the price, especially. Low end ARM Cortex M chips cost less than 
one dollar, and require just few passive components in a simplistic but 
complete running system. Raspberry Pi runs Linux for a total system cost 
of $15 ($20? $30). The goal here is computers so cheap that if one falls 
behind a really big and heavy desk that's hard to move, you sigh and get 
another unit. Seriously, only at this price point it'll be practical to 
deploy massive amounts of computers into scenarios like 'white goods' 
and party photo-balloons and such, and Linux wants to be there, so it's 
worth to pay attention to ARM.

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ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Kevin Kofler
Hi,

I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom) 
based smartphone:
http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat 
ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the 
instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still 
worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core 
Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture 
filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for 
performance increases. We should rather support only one primary 
architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need 
for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the 
legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary 
architectures are for.

Kevin Kofler

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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Paul Wouters

On Fri, 15 Jun 2012, Kevin Kofler wrote:


So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.


Speed is not my main concern on a smartphone CPU. Battery consumption is.

Paul
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Matthew Garrett
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 01:57:18AM +0200, Kevin Kofler wrote:

 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture 
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for 
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary 
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need 
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the 
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary 
 architectures are for.

If Fedora ARM is currently causing you problems then please do point out 
the specifics. But if it's not, then why do you expect it to get any 
worse if it becomes a primary architecture?

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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.at said:
 So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat 
 ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the 
 instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still 
 worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core 
 Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

_A_ smartphone is trying Atom (and there's no telling if it will be
successful).  ARM still beats the tar out of x86 at performance per
watt hour, and Atom hasn't come close after years on the market.

What about Fedora supporting ARM offends you so much to bring this rant?
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Itamar Reis Peixoto
On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 8:57 PM, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.at wrote:
 Hi,

 I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom)
 based smartphone:
 http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

 So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
 ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
 instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
 worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
 Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

        Kevin Kofler


well, at my home I have more arm machines than x86

I am replacing x86 with arm



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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread tim.laurid...@gmail.com
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 1:57 AM, Kevin Kofler kevin.kof...@chello.atwrote:

 Hi,

 I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom)
 based smartphone:
 http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

 So even smartphones are going x86 now. It looks like x86 is going to defeat
 ARM just like it defeated all the previous attempts at changing the
 instruction set, even Intel's own IA-64. The fastest x86 CPUs are still
 worlds faster than the fastest ARM CPUs. This new smartphone's single-core
 Atom is competitive in speed with other smartphones' multi-core ARMs.

 So I would urge Fedora not to waste our time on a low-end architecture
 filling a temporary niche which will become obsolete as demand for
 performance increases. We should rather support only one primary
 architecture (x86, i.e.: x86_64, and legacy i686 as long as there's a need
 for it) and support it well, as we have done since we finally got rid of
 the
 legacy PPC burden. Niche architectures are exactly what secondary
 architectures are for.

Kevin Kofler

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troll mode
Why do we waste time on Linux, when we all just can use Windows, the
desktop market leader 
/troll mode

Linux is about choices and is driven by people by by people with passions
for something, even if not what every body else think is importent.
So telling people to don't waste time on something they care about, Is
wrong in so many ways.

Tim
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Re: ARM is a dead end

2012-06-14 Thread Emmanuel Seyman
* Kevin Kofler [15/06/2012 06:48] :

 I've been pointed to a news item about a (apparently the first) x86 (Atom) 
 based smartphone:
 http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/14/orange-san-diego-review/

Moorestown has been around since 2010 and several vendors have made phones
using it. None of these have ever been released since the battery consumption
was off the scale compared to any ARM processor.

Emmanuel
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