Windows phone uses the NT kernel. Same as the Windows 8.1. It can support 64 cores. How about a phone with 64 cores.
There are many reasons that there are no 64 core phones. I have listed some of them.
- Qualcomm has no 64 core SoC (Qualcomm makes all the windows phone SoCs)
- There is no 64 core SoC
- Even the next generation ARM interconnect only supports 32 cores in big.LITTLE (Current generations support 8)
- The die area would be too large (Double the die size of an intel chip)
- It would produce too much heat
- It would use too much power
- Most apps would only use a few cores
Well heck people said that we didn't need more than one core on our processors ten years ago, and people said that we didn't need more than 80GB of storage in our laptops. The idea of a 64 core phone is possible, but by the time we find the technology to feasibly squeeze the processing power down into a small form factor, either some new form factor or processor architecture/computing system (*cough* quantum computing *cough*) would've come along. Don't shred the OP up too much lads![]()
Windows phone uses the NT kernel. Same as the Windows 8.1. It can support 64 cores. How about a phone with 64 cores.
I know that it's a gimmick. But even Android sells on gimmick.
A 64 cores smartphone running in dc current to complement the cores.
Because the Tegra K1 comes with a 192 core GPU, capable of rendering at upto 4K and with more power than a PlayStation 3.
A GPU with hundreds of cores is nothing special. Many have over a thousand cores. A GPU with a hundred cores can be just as powerful however. It depends only on the GPU's architecture. CPUs are no different, it's just not something commonly understood.
Anyway, getting back to the OP, we can't really measure performance in terms of cores. If we could, there would be no reason to stop at 64. Why not 2048? Or 4096? Or a million?
There's a reason why desktop CPUs haven't really gone beyond four cores, while even the lowliest dual core desktop CPUs blow away the octacore CPUs in our smartphones, which is why this thread makes little sense.
If 64 core config is never going to be a reality, then why does NT support it?
Do you think that I didn't know that there was more the CPU performance than core count? I merely recommended a SOC capable of over 64 cores.
because the Tegra K1 comes with a 192 core GPU, capable of rendering at upto 4K and with more power than a PlayStation 3",
If 64 core config is never going to be a reality, then why does NT support it?
No, I didn't think so, but you did say:
which can be taken to mean that there is a connection between core count and performance, which isn't very clear for those who don't know better. That is why I jumped in.
Because it makes sense for some servers. It doesn't make sense for desktops or any other type of single-user device. For such devices, faster cores is better than more of them.
