<<@umeshkumarasamy6608
says :
I'm grateful that I got to see this. Good work, sir!
>>
<<@fridaycaliforniaa236
says :
Can't wait to see the day where we'll use RISC-V on random PCs, instead of the x86 architecture =)
>>
<<@konradcomrade4845
says :
is there a RiskV processor which can do John L Gustafson's Posits numbers format? Or even his scalable Unum format (but that may be more interesting for heavy arithmetic scientific calculation) Beating Floats at their own Game!
>>
<<@jpechacek80
says :
Great presentation, but you need to get a better haircut. :)
>>
<<@gxtoast2221
says :
Switzerland is the home of the two largest and most influential organisations on the planet — the UN and the WEF, now the UN-WEF. It is no coincidence that this is so. Their merger in 2019 under the UN-WEF Strategic Partnership Agreement was condemned by over 400 UN Civil Societies and their new global Public Private Partnership model was called out as corrupting and a threat to humanity. These are the interests behind RISC-V. Make no mistake this isn't about opening up the chip market. They do not want technology independence. They want total control of chip manufacturing (China, primarily) and only provide enough power to individuals and small to medium business to keep them connected to cloud and rental (subscription) services.
>>
<<@johnmckown1267
says :
Still waiting for a good miniPC with RISC-V running Linux. Needs to be at least RV64GC.
>>
<<@Aragubas
says :
really looking forward for developing software and hardware for RISC-V 😋
>>
<<@michaelkaercher
says :
It is interesting. The pressure from ARM based architectures from Apple or Snapdragon to Intel will be replicated from RiscV to ARM.
>>
<<@ByteMeCompletely
says :
David Patterson hasn't taped out a processor, EVER. He just spent his entire academic career hawking an instruction set. Someone else will have to seal his legacy. I'd give more credence to Jim Keller, not David Patterson.
>>
<<@Triro
says :
It would be nice to have more open sourced / open standard computing be a thing. As currently we're using closed standard x86 / ARM. And while arm being efficient, RISC-V is honestly just the true future. As open standards that do the same thing usually win over closed standards. I'm excited to see where RISC-V goes. And hopefully one day, I can either use a ARM cpu, or more preferably, a RISC-V CPU in my Linux gaming rig.
>>
<<@Springtha
says :
I can imagine RISC-V is driven by the Chinese tech firm.
>>
<<@EarnestWilliamsGeofferic
says :
I hope to hear from you again ... verrrrrry soon.
>>
<<@12q8
says :
Amazing! It's awesome you make these annually.
>>
<<@courtlaw1
says :
When will we get someone making and selling serious RISC-V CPU and boards for the home builder markets.
>>
<<@DanBurgaud
says :
0:55 It does not matter if x86 and ARM is faster and better, the fact that these are Closed ISA, their corresponding government can throw the Ban Hammer and deprive certain countries from using it. My money is on Open ISA in general and RISC-V in particular.
>>
<<@patriot0971
says :
As more RISC-V dev tools are available, more polished software will enhance the ecosystem.
>>
<<@Mario1vsSonic1
says :
I would love to see you review Milk-V Pioneer. RISC-V desktop that allegedly has good performance, however, it is a bit pricey. But it comes with 128GiB RAM and 1TB SSD, 64 cores, and some more goodies I think. It costs around the same as a high end gaming desktop. Is there a way to make a donation? I understand if around $2500 might be pricey to test something for a youtube vid, but crowdsourcing might pay for it. I am willing to donate some at least.
>>
<<@CrackDavidson1
says :
Imagination technologies APXM-6200 seems quite interesting as a board integrated with their GPU. Seemingly announced the day after this video went live. 😅
>>
<<@Panacea9
says :
Canadian trick with Germany. The riscv with and without the lock was coded by Canada. It is known as the arm chipset now. It is in a lot of mobile devices as it runs more efficient and processes much less heat. It was tricked to be initially coded by Germany but with a revision and accelerator update with some code improvements. USA was given the chip to look at for some reason. It had both the initial revision and updated one with a lock or 2 on it. With the lock it would underperform Intel and and chips but without the lock it would work with less heat and be more stable without cooling. The version given too USA even with the lock they found removed capped out relatively quickly. Though with the rate they release will still be around for decades. The reason suspected it would be handed over us surveillance with the second suspicion that Canada could either improve the code and get it faster or there were more locks on it and it could be upscaled for 100s of more interations.
>>
<<@Panacea9
says :
From what I remember us a lot of USA asking About this as they couldnt fully understand the code. So it was base code plus an accelerator. The chip made by Canada was the code open source with a lock on it so it couldn't be upscaled past a certain speed. They were asking about hardware locks and software locks. The hardware locks in theory could be bypassed easy if you could extract the code and put it on an open chipset. The software lock could be a program string not allowing it to go past a certain speed or something to create an error, or increase error rate as it goes faster and faster. It could be lots of things. It could be more than one lock or lots hidden. So they were asking if I was privy to this Intel. No. But they were able to unlock it past 1 or 2 simple locks they found in a day when they don't fully understand the code in the first place. So it is a mystery to me if there are hidden locks that will give Canada an advantage later and backdoors in the system that would allow Canada to hijack all the arm based chips for surveillance.
>>
<<@ConfuSomu
says :
Great update. Thank you!
>>
<<@Panacea9
says :
Esper ant o?
>>
<<@happymelon7129
says :
Acceleration coming... replace with RISC-V and also replace the OS, office app (very cheap /Free) AMD, INTC Slip as China Moves Away from Western Tech China officials tell telecom carriers to phase out foreign chips by 2027. -->Gov office also in progress This is U$A dream come true .. China helping U$A to stop chip companies from supplying Chinese companies. So great to see the two governments working together.
>>
<<@Panacea9
says :
Is this Canada or you helped with math to check to see if it could be improved? It is an open source chip without that code used in the interface? I am foggy and probably didn't have an understanding of it then.
>>
<<@suki4410
says :
Since Arm and Risc-V are newer cpus, they use much less current, than the old cpus.
>>
<<@raderator
says :
Looking forward to the day when Linux and Risc-V dominate home computing.
>>
<<@backacheache
says :
Arduino and risc-v seem like a good match, I wonder how long it'll be till it's dominant in that market?
>>
<<@backacheache
says :
RISC5 is very much needed now as ARM currently seems to be about monetisation rather than innovation. It's something Cory Doctorow predicts as the eventually fate of all big successful companies and calls the concept ensh!tifiction
>>
<<@ps3301
says :
Risc v has no chance in gpu. Why ? Not even amd has much market share in gpu. Risc v cpu may have a share in some tv, router or industrial market.
>>
<<@ecdhe
says :
What would be interesting to know is the evolution of publicly available RISC-V micro-architectures (commercial or open source) and how do they fare against their x86 or ARM counterparts
>>
<<@diuran1919
says :
When will there be new powerful RISC in 2024?
>>
<<@danielweith1075
says :
It will be nice to see consumer electronics with RISC-V, Android is going to be key in the speed of adaptation and chip availability.
>>
<<@ericwood3709
says :
I had no idea RISC-V was a threat even to GPUs and NPUs for machine learning. I just figured it was a competitor to ARM. I hope to see it competing with desktop CPUs in an ATX form factor one day. I'd love to have Linux on RISC-V in a full fat desktop PC.
>>
<<@cristianoo2
says :
Im a big enthusiast of RISC V. Im sending my best wishes for it to succeed. I think inovative companies such as Google should try to adopt it as main processing unit. Maybe when building their own chips, they could help improve the tech
>>
<<@mawkuri5496
says :
its time to develop risc v for smartphones and laptops and for datacenters. in order to achieve that there should be free courses from basic to advance,for its development coz most people cant afford to enroll in their courses.
>>
<<@RAZR_Channel
says :
Hey... Hey... Hey... 1M Subs... Knew you could do it man... Congrats.!!!
>>
<<@alexrahardjazh
says :
Focus your knowledge toward China. China love to fund the open source standard of risc v its good for their business. And for the researchers its great for them to gain fortunes in China and break through monopoly, dual poly of tech oligarch . If you guys can work hand in hand with China the open standard and the open source of this architecture shall be kept just like Libux revolution in the servers and android the linux clone on the handheld devices. This will be greater if the risc v also can be use as microcontroller and as gpu processors
>>
<<@stevencrawford6503
says :
So not a RISC-y thing to bet on into the future 🤔
>>
<<@PaulSpades
says :
I find it strange if RISC-V cores are being used as NPUs, because LLMs seem to work more efficiently with 2 and 4 bit weights. Unless you pack and unpack those in an rv128 ALU, you can't design really small and efficient logic units. And even then, AVX instructions in x86 are wider. So, what's going on here?
>>
<<@auroraaa._.
says :
What's the difference between RISC-V & something like ESP32?
>>
<<@VamosViverFora
says :
It’s not promising anymore. It’s delivering. Really excellent news!
>>
<<@digitalkind
says :
Very useful, TY!)
>>
<<@218cortex
says :
Kinda crazy to think that there's a RISC-V CPU inside my Google Pixel's security chip. It's a lot more popular than I thought it was. Great video as always!
>>
<<@johnbee1574
says :
Good stuff I’m thinking x86 might be facing a decline when facing new apple hardware and mobile devices so there may be a gap in the market also I hope they don’t just become know for micro controllers. I’d love a proper desktop solution
>>
<<@walkman1269
says :
This is so exciting to see.
>>
<<@chriholt
says :
Definitely exciting times! It is amazing how much RISC-V has progressed over your annual updates. Seems like it is really picking up steam!
>>
<<@koppadasao
says :
*PCMCIA!*
>>
<<@JB52520
says :
It's a bit greedy for Nvidia and AMD to be worried about RISC-V AI acceleration. What's wrong with being the best graphics (and CPU) companies on the planet? Even if they become quadrillionaires, it won't sate their hunger, and they'll have less urgency to improve their graphics technology.
>>
<<@retropcscotland4645
says :
Intel is phasing out x86 in favour of x64. I predict a grim future for intel cpu's since a lot of people including myself still use x86. Very good informative video.
>>
<<@axl1002
says :
Jim Keller's chip cough cough...
>>
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