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MacMoore's Law - How about the G5? the G6? the G7? 

Future of the Macby Laser Quasar Absolutely

(Now that's a real pseudonym, ain't it!)

THE G4 IS JUST INCREDIBLE, AND HAS MY mouth drooling uncontrollably, as I am sure it has everyone else's in the Mac community (and probably even beyond.) 

Twice as fast as the fastest available Pentium!
Wow.
But folks, let’s think of the implications of this phenomenon, if it continues (as well it might). The implications are absolutely incredible.
We all know about Moore's Law, originally taken to be: "Chip speeds double every eighteen months." 
Nowadays, though, we might take that to apply only to Pentiums and Pentium-like chips like the Cyrix and AMD: with PowerPC chips, we seem to be getting a doubling in performance every twelve months, or even faster!
Just imagine what might happen in about six years' time: The PowerPC, having started off at roughly the same speed level as the then-current Pentium, would have increased in speed 2-to-the-power-of-6 times, or 64 times, while the Pentium and its cronies would have speeded up only 2-to-the-power-of-4 times, or 16 times. 
In other words, at the end of six years, the fastest available PowerPC will be four times as fast as the fastest available Pentium!
But it gets better: for remember, those six years started, not yesterday, but around the time the PowerPC came out. 
In other words, the end of the 6-year-period is at hand: only a couple of years, or maybe three more, down the road!
Now what's so incredible about this, you might ask. Well, folks, it means that very soon, even under emulation, the Mac will run Windows faster than any PC!
In other words, in a short time the Mac will be, not just the fastest personal computer you can buy, but also the fastest Windows computer you can buy.
And who in heaven's name will buy anything else, then? Except, of course, those who can't even afford the $1,500 or so the latest Mac is likely to cost.
And you know the best part? The best part is, it doesn't even matter whether this Moore's Law disparity between the Pentium and the PowerPC has a ratio of eighteen-to-twelve. All that matters is that it be some significant ratio, and the conclusion is as inevitable as death and taxes!
As long as this trend continues, this spells the end of the PC, some time down the road. Logically, mathematically, and inexorably, the "Intel Inside" PC is doomed.

Unless, of course, Andy Grove takes the risk of starting to make RISC chips! But given all the money he's devoted to making CISC ones, isn't that too great a risc for him?  


... (not his real name -- but you figured that out already, right?) ... calls himself a "Thinker", especially about the future. He thinks that's where he'll be spending the rest of his life (but who's he kidding, eh?  Doesn't he realize it's always going to be now?)

Most people say to him "You can't be serious" -- and they're right, he can't. (But then, who can be serious about the future, seeing as how anything can happen in it, and usually does ... er, will?)

His best book -- indeed his only book -- is entitled The Seventh Generation, and its shareware version in Adobe Acrobat format is available for download from his alter-ego's web site (under construction right now) at http://cpu2308.adsl.bellglobal.com. It's all about the next 150 years or so, and where technology might take us in that amount of time. (Just $5.00 -- cheap! And well worth it, though he says so himself). Check it out.

And send him e-mail: he loves feedback!

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