He doesn’t list what the mistakes will be. He said that he fears that because hardware people aren’t software people, that they will make the same mistakes that x86 made, which were then made by Arm later.
He did mention that fixing those mistakes was faster for Arm than x86, so that brings hope that fixing the mistakes on Risc V will take less time
Not OP, but consider using FUTO Keyboard. It’s made by the group Louis Rossmann works with, and it has offline speech to text (no sending data to Google), swipe keyboard, and completions. It’s also source-available, which isn’t as good as open source, but you could examine the code and verify their claims if you wanted to.
I’m using it and, while it’s not perfect, it’s way better than the open source Android keyboards with swiping that I’ve tried.
Anyone willing to summarize those mistakes here, for those who can’t watch the video rn?
He doesn’t list what the mistakes will be. He said that he fears that because hardware people aren’t software people, that they will make the same mistakes that x86 made, which were then made by Arm later.
He did mention that fixing those mistakes was faster for Arm than x86, so that brings hope that fixing the mistakes on Risc V will take less time
Basically, his concern is that if they are not cooperating with software engineers that the product won’t be able to run AAA games.
It’s more of a warning than a prediction.
What are “AAA turns”?
Sorry, AAA games. I was swiping on my keyboard and didn’t see the mistake.
SwiftKey?
Not OP, but consider using FUTO Keyboard. It’s made by the group Louis Rossmann works with, and it has offline speech to text (no sending data to Google), swipe keyboard, and completions. It’s also source-available, which isn’t as good as open source, but you could examine the code and verify their claims if you wanted to.
I’m using it and, while it’s not perfect, it’s way better than the open source Android keyboards with swiping that I’ve tried.
Giving it a whirl right now. Thanks for the recommendation.