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Ars Technica Interviews 970 Designers

11223 writes "John "Hannibal" Stokes has interviewed Pete Sandon, the PowerPC 970's main designer, and David Edelsohn, a compiler writer from IBM, and clarified several points about the 970 regarding group formation, vector issue queues and performance, and more. The interview is a very interesting read for anyone who has been following his earlier articles on the processor that Apple calls the G5."

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  1. Re:Windows based 970? by pv2b · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People hacking OS X to run on their non-apple machines is not a real threat to Apples.

    COMPANIES selling non-Apple machines running OS X are a real threat to Apple.

    The legal issues won't stop the first crowd (but then again, Apple won't have lost a great deal), but the people who actually buy computers and work with them as well as Joe home user will not go to any lengths to save a few bucks just to run OS X on a non-Apple box.

    That's where Apple gets its money -- and it's pretty well protected.

    Apple does make the entire computer, which is much more than a sum of its parts.

    I'm not sure how many of the components that go into a car (I'm not a car nut) are actually made by the car company themselves, but let's for the sake of argument say that the car company doesn't make any of the components in the car. But the design of the car and putting the car together is still something the car company does, and that is the value they add.

    This is basically what Apple does, to make a product you don't neccecarilly have to make your components yourself.