ARM will likely become the dominant CPU for PCs in the near future as more manufacturers adopt its architecture.
ARM will likely become the dominant CPU for PCs in the near future as more manufacturers adopt its architecture.
when everything is handled by x86 systems, one of my friends uses an m1 macbook air for school and depends on a virtual machine created for her studies because of programs such as quartus or orcad.
Until there is enough support, for people wanting nothing more than a chromebook they are fine. For most others it won't be until they can run everything that current systems can run. As far as business applications they may never replace x86 for home use im sure in the very far future they will have a place as either more developers create arm based applications and things similar to proton get more support to be able to run x86 on arm efficiently. But I never see x86 going anywhere atleast in my lifetime. Look at some programming languages like cobalt, many systems still run on it.
They offer speed, cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and broad compatibility. While not all features are essential at once, the more capabilities they provide, the greater their potential impact. Ultimately, it comes down to the value delivered to the user versus any associated expenses. Apple's M series chips excel in their specific domain, enabling focused success, but achieving dominance would require expanding their reach across diverse areas.