• Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I have to demonstrate to my friends every time how my MBP M2 blows my Ryzen 5950x desktop out of the water for my professional line of work.

    I can’t catch quite the drift what x86/x64 chips are good for anymore, other than gaming, nostalgia and spec boasting.

    • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      I have a 5950X computer and a Mac mini with some form of M2.

      I render video on the M2 computer because I have that sweet indefinite Final Cut Pro license, but then I copy it to the 5950X computer and use ffmpeg to recompress it, which is like an order of magnitude faster than using the M2 computer to do the video compression.

      I have some other tasks I’ve given both computers and when the 5950X actually gets to use all its cores, it blows the M2 out of the water.

      • Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Is it possible you’re using your desktop’s GPU for ffmpeg encoding, and not the CPU, by chance?

        • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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          5 days ago

          No, you need to manually specify that, and the options are more limited, so I usually do CPU encoding unless I’m prioritizing encoding speed over quality for some reason. (And yes, I have verified it’s using the CPU by looking at the CPU usage while it’s encoding).

    • psvrh@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      I can’t catch quite the drift what x86/x64 chips are good for anymore, other than gaming, nostalgia and spec boasting.

      Probably two things:

      • Cost- and power-no-object performance, which isn’t necessarily a positive as it encourages bad behaviour.
      • The platform is much more open, courtesy of some quirks of how IBM spec’ed BIOS back before the dawn of time. Yes, you can get ARM and RISC-V licenses (openPOWER is kind of a non-entity these days) and design your own SBC, but every single ARM and RISC-V machine boots differently, while x86 and amd64 have a standard boot process.

      All those fancy “CoPilot ready” Qualcomm machines? They’re following the same path as ARM-based smartphones have, where every single machine is bespoke and you’re looking for specific boot images on whatever the equivalent of xda-developers is, or (and this is more likely) just scrapping them when they’re used up, which will probably happen a lot faster, given Qualcomm’s history with support.

      I’d love to see a replacement for x86/amd64 that isn’t a power suck, but has an open interface to BIOS.