Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 4th Sep 2009 23:50 UTC, submitted by poundsmack
Hardware, Embedded Systems "You know, it's been nearly forty years since Intel introduced the first microprocessor, and even at this late date the company comprises a whopping eighty percent of the global market for CPUs. But not so fast! Like an electronics industry remake of The Magnificent Seven (which is, of course, an American remake of The Seven Samurai) NEC and Renesas have teamed up with a stalwart band of companies, including Hitachi, Toshiba, Fujitsu, Panasonic, and Canon, to develop a new CPU that is compatible with Waseda University professor Hironori Kasahara's "innovative energy-saving software." The goal is to create a commercial processor that runs on solar cells, moderates power use according to the amount of data being processed (a current prototype runs on 30% the power of a standard CPU), remains on even when mains power is cut, and, of course, upsets the apple cart over at Intel."
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RE: Desktop OS
by dagw on Sun 6th Sep 2009 10:31 UTC in reply to "Desktop OS"
dagw
Member since:
2005-07-06

What makes you think Apple or Microsoft won't get on board for their mobile offerings? Both companies have in the past shown willingness to change CPU vendors for various projects if doing so fits their needs. I see no inherent reason why a future iPhone or Zune couldn't use this CPU if it lives up to its claims.h

I don't see this going very far.

If you can grab a decent chunk of the embedded and mobile market, then the Desktop market is irrelevant.

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