To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
AFAIK, AMD are just as keen on TPM as Intel is.
So who is goiing to line up to buy hardware that someone else controls?
This just doesn't make sense to me.
I'm hoping a Chinese company might prduce a motherboard sporting an ULTRASPARC T2.
http://www.sun.com/featured-articles/2007-0807/feature/index.jsp
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UltraSPARC_T2
Apparently Sun has plans to release the hardware design under the GPL.
Linux would really fly on that thing ... and yes, you would be in control of your desktop.
Here it is:
http://www.regdeveloper.co.uk/2007/08/28/sun_ultrasparc_t2_processo...
I knew I'd seen it somewhere.
Now there is a design which you can be asured that your hardware is on your own side.
I like the sound of that.
That doesn't sound TOO bad.
This just doesn't make sense to me.
About a gazillion people who doesn't know what they buying, with the help of a gazillion people who doesn't care what they're selling as long as they profit, I'm afraid.
It's partially because of these tendencies that I have ported my favourite Linux distribution (Slackware) to MIPS (Loongson 2E) and SPARC (UltraSPARC II) and it flies on my relatively slow hardware.
I and many others will be totally free from both Intel and AMD. There is a Chinese company creating an UltraSPARC T1 derivative (http://www.polarismicro.com) and SRISC (http://www.srisc.com) has done the same thing
And of course there is the Loongson processor, which already performs admirably at 660 MHz. This is the official Chinese processor developed by ICT (Institute for Computing Technology) of CAS (Chinese Academy of Science).
Very soon Loongson 2F will be available in multiple systems from Lemote and next year Loongson 3 will cause mayhem with its 16 cores in workstation, servers and supercomputers. The Tile64 processor doesn't look that bad and neither does Cell.






Member since:
2007-03-30
"...as a potential technological enabler of more effective DRM, it's also the ideal companion to Blu-ray and HD DVD, and a godsend to Big Content. Look for it across the rest of Intel's desktop and portable line by the end of 2008 and prepare to kiss fair use goodbye.
I can see AMD using this as a positive point of differentiation between them and Intel. "AMD and Linux leave YOU in control of your desktop."
Edited 2007-08-29 05:26 UTC