MIPs has proven to scale. It used to run in high end workstations 64bit even! The problem of course is fragmentation.
They figure in this weak economy, parents will be willing to splurge on toys for their children that utilise devices they already have — or want — themselves. One very clear message form reading the comments. That message is that the average techie has absolutely no understanding of human nature or business.
The C64 was a mega success. Many toymakers and entertainment companies are making child specific devices such as electronic crayons and games for iOS and Android. As long as they can watch a Wiggles video or play a simple game they are happy. Have to agree here. You can teach them starting piano interactively, they can do paint programs, watch videos, etc.
Your point? Yes people buy them and give them to their kids to play games on sometimes. But lots of people also then pick it up and use it themselves once the kids have gone to bed.
Is anyone even arguing this point? So what if there is? How does that affect the existing market, or support your statement that apple is in trouble? They have plenty of Android products though. Australia is one of Apples strongest markets.
If sales are going badly here for Apple they must be a disaster elsewhere. Btw, there is a reason why Apple is still selling 3GS — it is their price fighting phone to compete against the low end Android because that is where the Android is growing, not in the upper segments but down in the bargain basement carrier branded low end segment. Every tablet thus far has been loaded with a shoehorned, bastardized version of a smartphone specific OS.
Hence forth, Ice Cream Sandwich will be available on even the cheapest China tabs. What I particularly like about these low end devices is that they seem to all have better connectivity. Sure the Novo7 Basic comes with Icecream Sandwich, which is definitely a selling point in its favor, but the price of that updated OS is compatibility, which along with the well known issues of possibly needing to find MIPS complied applications makes me really hesitant about its longevity in the market. Much better to get an ARM processor tablet, which if some of the posts online are to be believed actually gets double the battery life of this MIPS tablet.
It may not come with Icecream Sandwich yet, but there seems far more likelihood of updates to it, if for no other reason than the ease of porting within the same processor groups. Can you really go wrong? In the 7 inch Tablet market in the US, What are your options? The Samsung GalaxyTab 7 inch. It Ha s a microphone, no camera, no bluetooth, and is landscape oriented. At most, I seriously hope that it draws enough attention to move Samsung, Asus, and any other major OEM in the tablet business to engineer a better tablet for less.
Thom Holwerda Yeah but it does kind of fit the cheap product. Still a great deal. Edited UTC. Those had mips processors in them… Edited UTC. Cheap china tablets are unusable crap stuffed with Rockhip, weak batteries and cheap plastic. A good quality display cost is comparable to this entire tablet. High impact plastics are used by practical people who understand engineering and real world. Glass and aluminium are used by brainless designers who prefer form over function.
Glass is heavy, brittle and slippery. JAlexoid Have you handled any of the devices? All prices quoted FOB Shenzhen. At least I respect myself to stay away from crappy made things. Neolander Heh, my laptop was fscked last night, but then again it does that every 30 boots or so. Same thing was said months ago. You can now. Where do you live? General Newsletters Got a news tip?
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Answering your second question: yes, MIPS processors are still in use. They're frequently the processors used in things like routers and other small computing appliances like that. They're also increasingly appearing in small home computing devices in Asian marketplaces Lemote, for example. SPARC is very pricey, but, to be fair, very fast. I don't know enough about the other architectures mentioned to make any useful comment. For pedagogical purposes it is probably the best real-world architecture to show the nature of RISC, along with its warts.
This is just speculation. I managed to find a graph of the embedded processor market share, although it's only RISC processors during the s. Note the big chunk that is MIPS. ARM seems to be getting especially popular in mobile devices, and PowerPC is still huge in embedded systems, especially automotive. You can even find the occasional M68k if you look in the right device.
MIPS is probably popular because it's a real architecture, but still relatively simple. It's arguably one of? Even I could figure it out! It really depends on what you want to learn, and why. Just for fun? To build an embedded device? To write a compiler? To write your own assembly code? To stretch your mind? SGI had several computer systems built upon this processor family, such as the Onyx and several others. It's note worthy to mention, HP also produced a RISC processor in the 's which went on to power some of their commercial computer systems.
I would like to add that today you will see Chinese companies use MIPS, including notably Ingenic Semiconductor , which targets consumer markets, and Loongson Technology , which is involved in consumer products and supercomputers. Atmel AVR. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow.
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