• @JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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    -131 year ago

    Isn’t that the point? This new layer is supposed to make it easier to port everything, and they’re saying that’s what Rosetta did for Apple/Mac.

        • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          341 year ago

          to the end user it doesn’t matter if it works.

          Emulation is always slower and eats more battery. Microsoft’s laziness is proof they don’t care about that hardware, so may just as well buy an iPad Pro instead.

          • @saiarcot895@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            To add to what the other person said, there are some Windows-only games even today that run better on Linux than on Windows (I don’t have examples off the top of my head.)

            • @QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              Yuzu can exhibit superior performance because the Switch is rocking the Tegra X1 from 2015. Yuzu absolutely cannot beat the Switch with contemporary hardware and/or comparable power consumption.

                • @QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Oh yeah, clearly I did not read the article well. Still, it doesn’t mean what you think it does.

                  First, Yuzu is more of an alternative API implementation than an emulator in this setup. The stock Switch OS and API implementation have been entirely replaced with Linux and the Yuzu implementation of the API. Given recent performance uplifts in the Linux kernel, I’m not surprised that Linux+Yuzu beats the first-party implementation.

                  Second, the use of the word “emulation” in the above thread is really a misnomer: Rosetta 2, Prism and the like all perform what is called dynamic ISA translation. Yuzu need not perform ISA translation when running on ARM hardware.

                  • @notthebees@reddthat.com
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                    11 year ago

                    I’m also not surprised and I still find it amusing. The ISA translation is something I never actually thought about in emulation

          • @Wooki@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            Its not laziness, they have lost developers support over time and lets be honest here, Windows 8 arm was roundly laughed out the door. Expectations are now marketing hallucinated by copilot.

            This is typical Microsoft “agile”: minimum effort and delivery.

          • @n2burns@lemmy.ca
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            01 year ago

            Emulation is almost always slower and eats more battery.

            FTFY. There have been some cases where emulation actually outperforms native execution, though these might be, “the exceptions that prove the rule.” For example, in the early days of World of Warcraft, it actually ran better on WINE on Linux than natively on Windows.

      • @vanderbilt@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        I firmly maintain that if Microsoft gave a shit about ARM, they would be defaulting every one of their compilers to produce fat x86/aarch64 binaries. The reality is, however, that they don’t care about the hardware so long as it is good enough.

        • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          if Microsoft gave a shit about ARM, they would be defaulting every one of their compilers to produce fat x86/aarch64 binaries

          Wasn’t the point of .NET once that native binary code isn’t needed? I’d say if Microsoft gave a shit about ARM, everything would have been ported to .NET.