Why does notebookcheck always limit their perspective?
1. why not mention it might be a competitor to Apple's M chips?
2. why "Windows?" Plenty of people intentionally run Linux desktops, and many many more via ChromeOS, Android, and an incredible multitude of specialized hardware that might benefit from media and machine learning acceleration. Linux generally supports ARM very well, with extension use in data centres.
Quote from: davidm on November 08, 2024, 16:54:47Why does notebookcheck always limit their perspective?
1. why not mention it might be a competitor to Apple's M chips?
2. why "Windows?" Plenty of people intentionally run Linux desktops, and many many more via ChromeOS, Android, and an incredible multitude of specialized hardware that might benefit from media and machine learning acceleration. Linux generally supports ARM very well, with extension use in data centres.
If they're targeting gaming (which Nvidia does a lot) there's no need to target linux, chrome os and mac. Besides Chrome os competing with machine with 80W APU is a bad idea as is
@davidm: for both 1 & 2 isn't that just self evident and obvious tho?
I mean being an arm SoC by definition makes it an Apple M chip competitor whether you state it or not.
Likewise, Nvidia has a history of supporting Linux, especially with their tegra line. It's just to be expected.