- And performance, they are around a decade behind. But it’s good that the duopoly is finally getting some competition. - Not to mention performance on a power adjusted basis. - While I am all for competition; I would support making all IP (copyright - driver code, firmware, EDA deliverables, patents) public domain after 10 years (only for high tech stuff), I doubt this SKU will provide competition on a global scale. - They don’t need to compete on a global scale, their job is to remove the Sword of Damocles hanging over the Party’s head that is the control US has over x86 CPUs and AI accelerators. - Now that they know how to design the logical blocks of both, they can focus on proccess improvements, a work that is well under way. 
 
 
- For the company they’ll manage solid finances from domestic companies needing x86 that may face restrictions from Intel/AMD. Long term, it’s a workforce that’s been getting chip design experience for a good amount of time now. That’ll bode well for the countries chip design industry going forward as their x86 needs declines 




