Intel and AMD have lost out big time this week in the form of around $1.3 billion in new PC and server sales every year. The reason? The Russian government has decided it no longer wants US microchips inside its hardware.
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Um stupid question but what is considered a microchip. Is a cpu/ram/gpu etc considered microchips? The term microchip seems to be so......broad. I am only asking due to amd/intel is usually used in cpu's gpu's and even some ssd's
So if it is to be a new cpu I wonder if they would do anything special to it (such as making ARM chipset motherboards) or if it would be same thing as socket AM3 with Russian label.
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7 home premium 64 bitAMD Phenom II X6 1055TDDR3 1333 6144 MBytes each modual 2048 mbPower Color ATI R9 270x bluescreen edition
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self build
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7 home premium 64 bit
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I love my gaming rig, FreeCell and Solitaire never looked so good.
Bad for the US economy? Possibly.
But still a darned good idea. Hopefully other countries will follow suit!
There has to be a consequence of bad behavior.
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Linux Mint 17 Cinnamon | Win 7 Ult x64Intel I7-3770K @ 4.2ghz32GB G-Skill C10QEVGA GTX 670 2GB SC
From what I gather, ARM doesn't actually make any of the chips. They create the technology design (intellectual property) then lease the technology to semiconductor manufacturers. The CPUs they design are just a step above RISC processors.
Personally, I don't blame them. Intel has had "spy-ready" hardware and firmware in their chipsets since 2006. It even has it's own memory and communications controller. It's called Intel Management Engine Interface and uses the PCI Simple Communications Controller. It also uses the Host Embedded Controller Interface (HECI) and Active Management Technology (AMT).
I'm guessing but I'd wager that AMD has something similar.
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Windows 7 Pro-x64i7-2600 3.4GHz - 3.8GHz Turbo8Gb - 2x4GB, Muskin 991770 PC3-1333Integrated Intel HD 2000
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PC/Desktop
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Built 2/11/2011
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Windows 7 Pro-x64
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i7-2600 3.4GHz - 3.8GHz Turbo
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Intel DH67BL-B3
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8Gb - 2x4GB, Muskin 991770 PC3-1333
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Integrated Intel HD 2000
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Integrated Intel 10.1 HD, RealTek ALC892
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Asus LCD VH222H, Haier HL24XSL2a
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1920x1080, 1920x1080
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Crucial SSD C300-128Gb,
Western Digital WD5002AALX - 500Gb,
Western Digital WD7501AALS - 750Gb
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Seasonic 650W 80+ Gold Modular
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Rosewill Defender
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Stock CPU, Four 120mm case fans, PCH fan added
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Logitech EX100 Y-RBH94 Wireless
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Logitech EX100 M-RCE95 Wireless
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Antec Veris Premier-Multimedia IR Station,
Cyber Accoustics-3602 Speakers,
AFT XM-5U Card Reader,
Hauppauge TV-HVR-2250,
Sony LX300 USB Turntable
Bad for the US economy? Possibly.
But still a darned good idea. Hopefully other countries will follow suit!
There has to be a consequence of bad behavior.
Considering everybody in the west is yakking like spoiled kids about placing economic and political/diplomatic sanctions on Russia, I'm surprised that this is even news.
Together with the recent news that Russia's stopped supplying the ULA with rockets engines for the american Atlas V rocket, I take this as a piece of good and "take that" news.
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NEC Multisync EX231W
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2x Western Digital 1TB SATA3 Caviar Black Internal HDD // 1x WD 500GB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD // 1x WD 1TB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD // 2x WD 2TB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD
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Corsair Professional Series Gold AX850
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Antec 300
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Air-cooling
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Steelseries 6Gv2
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Steelseries Sensei RAW Glossy, Logitech M500
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* Japanese Windows XP Professional SP3
* Japanese Windows 7 Professional SP1
Personally, I don't blame them. Intel has had "spy-ready" hardware and firmware in their chipsets since 2006. It even has it's own memory and communications controller. It's called Intel Management Engine Interface and uses the PCI Simple Communications Controller. It also uses the Host Embedded Controller Interface (HECI) and Active Management Technology (AMT).