This one is interesting. First of all, in the larger corporate world 2% is a huge amount, to a small business that's not much, but to a major organization that's a lot.subterFUSE wrote:I've read that intel is customizing a 64 bit monster processor for Apple.
I wouldn't count on it. The Apple account is worthless to Intel in terms of sales numbers. Accepting the Apple deal was nothing more to Intel than an ego boost.
Mac accounts for less than about 2% of the computers worldwide. Do you think a company the size of Intel would make accomodations for that? Not bloody likely.
Expect the new Apple computers to utilize the upcoming Intel dual-core architecture such as Yonah.
Secondly reports are that the deal basically gave Intel a computer and OS manufacture that actually cares to implement their ideas, Microsoft is so huge that they move like molasses when it comes to change, remember every change has to be tested to death on a thousand machines...... Apple will implement changes to the OS to accommodate for new architecture ideas in a faster way than Microsoft can, or ever could, it's the advantage of a closed hardware OS. What this just might mean to me as an end user is that macs might actually be able to claim better performance for months before PC's catch up.
It doesn't matter if the chip has new design ideas that allow for faster operation if it's not supported by the OS. This has been a problem for Intel with windows, and considering how into Altivec Apple got, I can't see any reason why we shouldn't expect to see Intel try out new design ideas on macs first. So it's not as much Intel bending over backwards to design chips for Apple as much as Intel being happy that they have a company willing to implement their design ideas as soon as they are cooked.
Intel are happy about this in much more ways than an ego boost.