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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: September 13th, 2024

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  • Don’t see the point of this standard which runs over an inferior type of networking

    Inferior how? Matter is not comparable to Z-Wave. Z-Wave is a mesh network, Matter is just a standard which would allow Alexa, Siri, Google, etc. to control the same devices. To allow Z-Wave like functionality, Matter is able to work on top of Thread, which is in fact superior to Z-Wave.

    is brought to us by the companies that created the interoperability problem in the first place

    Of course. You don’t want to be the company known for refusing to participate in an open standard, even if you secretly don’t want it to succeed. Anyways, there’s no reason for companies to not want an open standard for controlling smart devices, since it literally helps everyone support more devices for basically no effort once you add support for Matter.









  • It’s getting there but running a full on PC is such a complex task over micros or special purpose devices.

    Design application ready CPUs are hard, but not really for these companies. The main issue was the need for a standard, given how many optional extensions are available for RISC-V. The RVA profiles fix this problem by giving a set of required extensions to be user-mode application ready, and they have been a thing for a while. However, these were lacking one important capability for modern applications: vector extensions. RISC-V already had SIMD support (similar to what x86 has), but the vector extension is so much better there’s really no need to even bother with it except with some microcontrollers .

    The RVA23 profile, ratified 4 days ago, addresses this by adding the vector extension to the list of required extensions for an application ready CPU. This should be enough for running modern applications, so maybe we’ll see some nice stuff in the next 1-2 years.





  • tekato@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    26 days ago

    Government comprises many departments and organizations, which do many things. It’s not a single blob of all good or all bad.

    I don’t remember saying the contrary. When one part of the government does something, it was still the government.

    not all back doors and CPU bugs are government-imposed

    Don’t remember saying every single backdoor is government-imposed. Fact is there’s at least one backdoor that is for the government, whether there’s 1 or 5 doesn’t really matter.


  • tekato@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    26 days ago

    you don’t know his actual usage

    Why would I need to know his usage? Whatever it might be, a newer CPU can do the same amount of work as an old CPU for a fraction of the energy.

    meaningless anyway unless you subtract from it the energy use from manufacturing and distributing a new system, as well as that from disposing of the old one.

    You mean the CPU that was already manufactured years ago and won’t magically disappear due to you refusing to upgrade to it? Whether you use it or not the energy to create it was already spent.

    you haven’t addressed the other problems mentioned at all

    And I didn’t mean to. I simply corrected you when you congratulated him for using less energy, which is not true.