ARM: True 3D Netbook Gaming in 2010

Status
Not open for further replies.

Niva

Distinguished
Jul 20, 2006
141
0
18,630
Yup, sounded exciting except no windows, so how will it game w/o windows? Maybe XP or vista will install on it?

Linux is great, I dual boot all my systems, but for games it's ... meh.
 

Hanin33

Distinguished
Feb 13, 2009
210
0
18,830
XP will install on it, vista will not. wouldn't be surprised to find some sort of 3rd party emulation such as wine in the mix though...

never really seen an ARM based system perform very well with windows... so guess we'll just have to see.
 

cryogenic

Distinguished
Jul 10, 2006
77
0
18,580
On the Windows side of things for all who wonder if XP/Vista/Win7 run on ARM, well, the desktop editions don't. But there are also Windows Tablet editions that do run.
 

jhansonxi

Distinguished
May 11, 2007
525
0
18,930
[citation][nom]montezuma[/nom]Why will Windows 7 not run on these machines?[/citation]Because Windows 7 currently only supports Intel x86-compatible CPUs (which includes AMD and Via CPUs). Past versions of Windows supported Itanium and way back in the Windows NT days MIPS was supported. Only the embedded versions of Windows (like Windows Mobile) support ARM but these versions are not entirely compatible with win32 (the application programming interface on desktop Windows) and leave a lot of libraries out that aren't needed for embedded systems. All the different versions and licenses are really quite a mess. Compare this to Linux which is modular and can be customized by anyone for anything.
 

lifelesspoet

Distinguished
Jun 2, 2009
95
0
18,580
I have seen promises of an arm based netbook 'coming next quarter' for about a year now and I'm getting tired of waiting to be honest. The OLPC foundation introduced the netbook to the world for developing nations and everyone copied them to make money. Now the OLPC group is working on an arm notebook and soon it will be copied.
 
G

Guest

Guest
Now this is what I call a professional Toms article!
No porn crap, to the point, short, and informative!

I'm surprised ARM goes over the 2Ghz limit,but don't think there will be that many 'modern games' it can run, other than opensource games.
ARM is still not supported by Windows, so a lot of games won't be playable.

I'm also not expecting those ARM processors to be as cheap as the Intel ones. They're not bouncing up to the x86 cpu's like AMD,and VIA; thus their price will be most likely higher.

I'd also like to know how overclockable an ARM processor is or will be, and if there are many Linux applications that allow overclocking.
 

WheelsOfConfusion

Distinguished
Aug 18, 2008
341
0
18,930
[citation][nom]ProDigit80[/nom]I'm also not expecting those ARM processors to be as cheap as the Intel ones. They're not bouncing up to the x86 cpu's like AMD,and VIA; thus their price will be most likely higher.[/citation]
ARM licenses its designs and other companies build the core and set it into a System-on-a-Chip with basically the north and southbridges plus graphics. Texas Instruments, Qualcomm, and nVidia all have ARM cores in SoCs out now that are going into mobile phones, PMPs, and "smartbooks." Hell, Nintendo uses ARM for the DS. In short, there's a lot of competition out there with plenty of high quality offerings featuring ARM at relatively low prices. You think AMD and VIA keep Intel's prices low? There are even more competitors with ARM designs.

As for overclocking, the current Cortex 8 is normally clocked at 600MHz in most products, but it can often be pushed up around 1GHz. Smaller manufacturing processes will probably enable greater overclocks.
 

waxdart

Distinguished
May 11, 2007
75
0
18,580
[citation][nom]Cryogenic[/nom]On the Windows side of things for all who wonder if XP/Vista/Win7 run on ARM, well, the desktop editions don't. But there are also Windows Tablet editions that do run.[/citation]

The google OS might be out by then. I'm sure MS would make a version if google made a version for ARM. Browser games should run.

Competition is good!
 

FSC

Distinguished
Sep 10, 2009
5
0
18,510
Once again the holy M$-$Intel$ alliance is killing the already poor competition and new ideas. WE NEED FLEXIBILITY damnit. sigh...
 
G

Guest

Guest
[citation][nom]WheelsOfConfusion[/nom]ARM licenses its designs and other companies build the core and set it into a System-on-a-Chip with basically the north and southbridges plus graphics. Texas Instruments, Qualcomm, and nVidia all have ARM cores in SoCs out now that are going into mobile phones, PMPs, and "smartbooks." Hell, Nintendo uses ARM for the DS. In short, there's a lot of competition out there with plenty of high quality offerings featuring ARM at relatively low prices. You think AMD and VIA keep Intel's prices low? There are even more competitors with ARM designs. As for overclocking, the current Cortex 8 is normally clocked at 600MHz in most products, but it can often be pushed up around 1GHz. Smaller manufacturing processes will probably enable greater overclocks.[/citation]
I was more comparing that upcoming ARM processor to the Intel Atom processor. The Atom processor is relatively cheap. I'm expecting this ARM processor to be a competitor to the Intel Atom processor, and am fairly sure it'll be able to beat the Atom in battery life tests.
In performance, it might, or might not..
In any case, seems like a great alternative to current Atom processor used in netbooks.
 
G

Guest

Guest
This is a ridiculous claim. "Latest PC Games" are x86 code, using Win32 APIs, with graphics running DirectX 9+ APIs (Windows XP or higher only)
Windows XP and later Windows desktop version don't run on ARM code
If Eric Shorn truly said that, he was being at least disingeneous. What is worse, for a technical site like Tom's to select that impossible gaming quote to title an article about porting ARM cores to 40nm at TSMC is frankly demonstrative of how low the old good Tom's site has fallen
 

geoffs

Distinguished
Oct 24, 2007
103
0
18,630
I don't know about "running the latest PC games", some of which will be Windows API and DirectX specific. However, many of the latest games are also available for the Xbox360 and PS3, which use the Xenon and Cell CPUs respectively and neither is x86 based. Clearly, those are not dependent upon Windows APIs and DirectX, therefore, it's entirely possible that those games could be ported to an ARM based system if there is a sufficient market for them.

A 2GHz dual core ARM would not be performance competitive with a 2GHz Core 2 Duo, however, it should be competitive with an Atom CPU and offer lower power consumption. Pair it with a high performance GPU (perhaps a PowerVR SGXMP) and you could have an amazingly high performance (perhaps comparable to a high end gaming PC in 2005) device that could even be battery powered. Put in more powerful (and more power hungry) GPUs from AMD or Nvidia and you might have the next gen Wii.
 

pender21

Distinguished
Nov 18, 2008
50
0
18,580
[citation][nom]montezuma[/nom]Why will Windows 7 not run on these machines?[/citation]

Windows will only run on CPUs that run x86 code - Intel CPUS and AMD too. A x86 ROM emulator also works, because you can install windows on a Transmetta Crusoe CPU that has a built in x86 emulator. ARM will have to pay a license fee though.

I still don't think this new CPU is going to make a splash.
 
G

Guest

Guest
If the ARM CPU supports virtualization reasonably well, it could install Windows just fine, they could take a very minimal stripped down Linux kernel running Virtualbox and run Windows with no problem. They certainly could do it without violating the x86 licensing BS.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.