<<@midge_gender_solek3314 says : Still useless!>> <<@MagnetSphere-kc3gm says : Ironic to think that cutting off technology to certain countries will actually help this technology take off>> <<@DiegoValle392 says : Time for a 2026 update>> <<@v1nAyA says : Imagine a scenario in 10-15 years: RISC-V systems, entrusted with government data, get hacked—perhaps by someone with deep knowledge of established architectures like ARM or Intel. The ultimate irony would be those same proprietary players turning around and selling a "solution"—a proprietary firewall or system based on the very RISC-V architecture that was compromised! While the cost of computing may drop, true control will still reside with the select few who possess the specialised knowledge and time required for high-level hacking. Despite this cynical outlook, RISC-V is a promising step toward a fully open-source hardware-software future.>> <<@marceallonardo says : I find it ironic that the automotive industry wants to own (not rent) their processor technology, while changing to a subscription model for as many features as possible and resisting any attempt to allow modification to their in-car software.>> <<@justus1810 says : The UltraRISC UR-DP1000 looks interesting. It has about 10x the tdp of a k1. Even though it doesn't look as good as the sg2380 (no gpu, lower tdp) it would still be the first "low power desktop" cpu. So we could finally get something better than the overgrown microcontrollers we have now.>> <<@server1ok says : Ni hao>> <<@WilliamShinal says : Regardless of ARM's shenanigans, they brought us a neat collection of ARM SBCs, 3 of which I own. Adding the Milk-V Mars to that roster would be slick as I get to see how Linux on RISC-V is developing.>> <<@tachyon5321 says : RISC-v sound great but the software may be a killer as nothing is standard.>> <<@erwinbockler7590 says : We are great believers in the RISC endeavor - great video. thanks. Meantime,we may be naive, but have yet to hear a clear (or any actually) discourse on how photonic chips fit in w/ RISC V....>> <<@archivalcopy says : There is now an x86/x86-64 emulator capable of running Unity and Steam on RISC-V. It's pretty impressive. It's called Felix86. I'd link it, but Google... Games generally need external GPU given relatively novel GPUs RISC-V SBCs tend to use. Still, pretty wild seeing Witcher 3 running on a Milk-V Jupiter. (I don't have spare hardware to test this on, so can't speak on any personal experience)>> <<@marine1718 says : is useless until get proper suport>> <<@chrishaidinyak4621 says : Does anyone know if the oct core spacemit K1 cpu available to the general public for pcb manufacture?>> <<@naga2015kk says : A BIG THANK YOU to Donald for his contribution to RISC-V>> <<@citizencain454 says : There was never free trade . Every country had tariffs on American Goods . The US just finally said We’ve had enough, and started doing what other counties have done to the US forever. When the tariff adjustments settle down after a few months , I’ll argue that it’s going to be even better for processor development . Because many key counties will have to invest in American production and otherwise to have access to our markets .>> <<@smUser8990 says : 4k please>> <<@luizpereira7165 says : ARM licensing is so cheap, why bother with risc-v? In fact the patent for the ARM architecture, in the sense of the intellectual property rights that protected the original architecture, has already expired. Technically, any company can use it freely now. A open source parallel coputing architecture like CUDA, that would be game changing.>> <<@airxperimentboom says : Thank you for the extensive research>> <<@THE16THPHANTOM says : Sounds like US tariffs have some unforeseen pleasant quirks. Even when that guy, who shalt not be named(because i dont know the policy of this channel in those terms), is wrong, he is right in some way. I'm glad to hear that we now have one more very compelling incentive to accelerate Risc-V development and adoption.>> <<@WistrelChianti says : wasn't sure I wanted to watch but glad I did. Nice update!>> <<@tulsatrash says : QEMU!>> <<@humanbeing2730 says : Excited to see an economy the size of China's put it's weight behind an open technology!>> <<@853nova4 says : I won't trust any chipset made by PRC>> <<@vree_ says : Man to think that maybe in 10-15 years we might game on riscv architecture and completely swap from proprietary x86/ARM sounds awesome.>> <<@dj53144 says : I was all set to catch the RISC-V bus, linux foundation member, Risc-v international member, submitted proposal for a development board. It wouldn't ship until July (if they approved it) I shopped around for a board that had the specs that I desired. Only $499, maybe i could swing that!. Oh wait... a little note.... may be subject to tariff. Lets see (499 x 1.25) + 499 = 1125.75! Looks like the RISC-V bus has flat tires, and it is out of fuel. There is no reason to even consider RISC-V now (even if they gave me a board, i would be worried about a hidden tariff charge)>> <<@justuskid9577 says : Cpu okay what about free gpu as counterpart for nv intel amd mrtt>> <<@apoptosis9966 says : Thank You.>> <<@duralikiraz says : Risc-V tartışmasız her alanda lider olmaya başlayacak ve bu kaçınılmaz. Video için teşekkürler 👍>> <<@middle_pickup says : Take away free trade, and you ensure the development of closed computing blocs.>> <<@HenryCavillage says : 👍👍❤❤>> <<@meryplays8952 says : Does anyone use the MUSE Book?>> <<@meryplays8952 says : The other problem people don't mention is the openness of the boards, RISC-V, ARM or whatever. It is not easy for kernel developers to have the capabilities in an organized manner. Am I wrong?>> <<@ryancarlson2763 says : Happy easter chris Christ is risen! Thanks for your videos>> <<@KostasPanagos-p1f says : I want to tell you Good job reaching 1million subscribers Your videos are perfect and good Please subscribe to him because he spent a lot of years making these videos and like>> <<@szymon-i1n says : 2:25 meaning there was a second operating system than windows or Linux on the PC?>> <<@snufkinmatt162 says : Well the US tech giants all sucked up to Trump. Their reward? The whole world's confidence in American tech has been permanently damaged. You chose him, now you live with the consequences and may they be as cringeworthy, stupid and thoughtless as your new orange overlord. As a UK resident, I would willingly and eagerly jump onboard to any EU based alternatives for all of their products including this platform we're on now - the sooner the better. The US can then shut its gates and become the new but more laughable version of North Korea, clapping their dear leader like empty automatons and thanking him for their oppression.>> <<@cianmoriarty7345 says : So Chris, does RISC-V have an official ABI?>> <<@pascalmartin1891 says : Sorry to remind a British that ARM Ltd is a UK company (still owned by a Japanese one?), largely manufactured in Taiwan, China and Korea. ARM is not tethered to the US. China is certainly suspicious on any product from a western country, but Europe has probably less concerns (beside Brexit..). I can see competition between the two in Europe.>> <<@ranke says : good vid chris! as always!>> <<@shimoda5771 says : Does the ability to add extensions increase the risk of a processor with hardware encoded backdoors? How does the problem differ from a closed ISA from a security standpoint?>> <<@JerryWoo96 says : What about mips?>> <<@Visentinel says : 1.8ghz 😂>> <<@MichelMorinMontreal says : It's hard to be more exhaustive... As we say in Quebec, "I'll be able to sleep tonight with less ignorance". Like other commentators, I can't wait for other technology sectors to get to grips with this new architecture, particularly in the Open Source field. At the moment, it seems that it's only the ‘big players’ who are getting involved. I'm convinced that this is an exceptional opportunity for more alternative approaches.>> <<@2bradar2 says : Hello Christopher, I have recently just started watching your video channel, and I find them very informative. I wasn't sure which video to post this comment to, so I chose the newest one. I am considering building a Plex Movie server using one of the Linux options and was wondering which one you would recommend. I currently am using windows 10 to do this, but with the end of windows coming soon, I need to find another way to run my movie server. Can you please help? Thank you.>> <<@Drawlen says : I’m so ashamed that the orange idiocy is destroying free global trade and the US democracy.>> <<@fridaycaliforniaa236 says : I'm working on a big project about the creation of a totally new CPU microarchitecture that will be able to use the RISC-V ISA (RV64i at first, for the developpement), and might give a 2 Watts CPU the power of 10 of the last Ryzens at once. I'm in the process of filing for an international patent right now, so I can't tell you more about this, sadly (for obvious reasons). But I can't wait to see my invention one day being tested on this channel 😇😇. Too bad the patent needs 18 months to be validated. I hope I'll have good news in January 2027.>> <<@JoeEbitDa says : I think the RP2350 was probably worth a mention, I've seen some activity with advanced hobbyists creating some improved RISC V math libs and some decent performance.>> <<@rosmcmahon says : 👏👏👏👏👏>> <<@MrTweetyhack says : RISCV will benefit China the most>> <<@JanuszKrysztofiak says : It is nice it exists, but I don't get the hype and don't share the excitement of many people here. It is just an instruction set. An 'open' instruction set does not mean its implementations will be open (doubtful) or platforms based on it standardized in any pro-user way (expect the same shit-show as on ARM with non-standard preboot environments limiting the choice of OSes to what vendor is willing to provide). As ironic as it may seem, the old good x86 IBM PC with UEFI and non-secure boot is the only beacon of freedom of use. I can't see many incentives for manufacturers to offer 'open' solutions to the consumer market. Think of Chromebooks. ARM-based Chromebooks once Google pulls the plug with updates turn into e-waste. Many x86 Chromebooks can be transformed with solutions such as MrChromebox into roughly ordinary PCs, so once they EoL, you will be able to install Linux or Windows on them and prolong their life.>>
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