Yes, but (answering to first and second point) today everything is changing fast, so ig that RISC-V evolution will earn something from that run too, but Moore's law is slowing down so maybe run is at the end, we'll see
And asks user "if you want i can kill him and close anyway. Proceed?", windows even then is trying to close something soft, linux says "sigkill", goodbye (i think that I've sounded a little cringy but, life is life, heh)
Thank you, (and others) for helping me understand this thing, maybe this answer is a little off-top but with that info i will be able to learn (sure i can search in internet but i need basis to know what I need to search) :), i'm not new to cpu and it things but risc-v is somewhat difficult to me.
I know, I mean, I want to use computer from 2028 in 2030, having hope that software will optimize, unlocking full potential of this devices (if there will be any in 2028 laptop)
That’s a valid point, though it’s not as absurd as it might seem. The thing is, I plan to buy this two-year-old computer in 2030, because perhaps the software will mature on it over the next few years, so that it might run noticeably more efficiently, just like my ThinkPad T470, for example, which ran more and more stably and smoothly over time (up to a point). Maybe what I'm writing sounds a bit like a prompt for an LLM model, but that's because I'm not used to posting on sites like this (I discovered this site today at 3:00 p.m. and I've only had an account for three hours), and as for LLM models, I spend a lot of time on them every day
that's even more logical, and lore accurate