Oh no.

  • El Barto
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    2711 months ago

    I’m not happy with what’s happening and I know that corporations are money making evil machines.

    But to say that chip makers have no incentive at all to secure their hardware is quite the hyperbole.

    • Arghblarg
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      -111 months ago

      Fair enough, probably was hyperbole :) But performance does seem to be a higher priority than security; they can always spin PR after the next exploit, after all, users already have the CPU in their system, they’ve made their money; what are users really gonna do if an issue comes up after they’ve bought their box?

        • whoareu
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          211 months ago

          Yeah, but we live in cpu monopoly. Intel and Amd Both companies put backdoors and all sort of shit in their cpus.

          • El Barto
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            111 months ago

            We don’t live in CPU monopoly. Arm and SoCs are also in the game.

            • @[email protected]
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              211 months ago

              Im out of the loop with those. Are Arm and socs viable alternative for home computing?

              Last time I checked I could not build a pc with Arm. Post above is right intel and amd are dominating home user market.

              I have a macbook air m1 and this arm chips is imo just amazing. No fan no issues, fast as fuck. Id like to build a pc with arm. Maybe when Linux and windows show more support for arm64?

              • El Barto
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                111 months ago

                Oh, for desktops? I don’t know. I was referring to macbooks and mac minis.

              • @[email protected]
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                111 months ago

                Linux supports ARM64 very well. Windows also has had ARM support for a quite a while. The main obstacles are 3rd party binary software (particularly on Windows) and lack of available hardware.