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Intel vs Qualcomm

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davewave:
Yesterday Intel announced a very poor result.   They now intend to layoff over 10% of the workforce.   In a nutshell, their momentum is down.

Meanwhile, the Qualcomm (snapdragon) based Notebook class of 2024 is getting very strong reviews.  While this is round two for Windows on ARM, it appears that Microsoft is serious this time.

Seems to me, as part of Media Center 33, JRiver might consider releasing a version of the software for the new Qualcomm Windows platform.   It is coming on stronger than I had thought possible.

True, there is an emulation mode for the ARM machines running windows.   But given the compute intensity of the video portion of this product, I would be astonished if performance of JRiver is acceptable in emulation mode.  Quite a few Adobe products are known to fail in emulation mode.   

This post has been modified to clear up some questions, some related to the topic location being moved.

BryanC:
They already do: https://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php/topic,139177.0.html

mattkhan:
That's a Linux build, he's surely referring to windows on arm (this thread was moved from windows board so probably a.bit misleading now)

Awesome Donkey:
It's likely going to depend on the adoption rate of Snapdragon X chips and Windows on ARM. Other than battery life, it seems what Qualcomm was saying about Snapdragon X, especially in regards to the performance of the chips, was a little overhyped. Plus it's very likely (other than potential driver issues which would be a Windows thing) Media Center will run on those systems fine via the x86 emulation in Windows 11.

It's not a situation like with Apple completely dropping Intel CPUs in favor of Apple Silicon forcing developers to port to ARM (even though x86 emulation via Rosetta 2 was amazing) sooner than later, not to mention x86 isn't going anywhere anytime soon. It's probably best to wait and see what happens as there's really no urgency to run out and buy a Snapdragon X laptop for development as long as the app runs via emulation. Also to wait and see if Windows on ARM finally gains some traction, this is probably the most important thing to take into consideration porting and releasing a native Windows ARM build.

There's competitors for the Snapdragon X chips, mainly AMD's Ryzen AI and Intel's Core Ultra CPUs.

Has anyone even bought a Snapdragon X laptop yet and tried to run Media Center on it? I kinda doubt most people buying Snapdragon X laptops even are interested in media playback.

BryanC:
Nobody asked for my two cents, but I couldn't imagine wanting to run any operating system less than Windows on ARM. Or another first generation attempt at Windows on ARM at that. Any imaginable use case would be better served by something else: Apple ARM, Linux ARM, Android ARM, Windows x86 all have their respective strengths, while Windows ARM does not. The Vulkan SDK for Windows ARM hasn't even been released AFAIK. And the ecoystem for third-party Windows ARM apps is non-existent and most developer feel spurned by previous attempts.

The only pro is that it might force vendors to create more ARM64 drivers.

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