That’s what I’m saying - iPhones have traditionally come with less memory than Android phones of the Dane generation. Apple has been able to get away with it.
So should Apple have also kept the PPC emulator around for Macs?
That’s what I’m saying - iPhones have traditionally come with less memory than Android phones of the Dane generation. Apple has been able to get away with it.
So should Apple have also kept the PPC emulator around for Macs?
>That’s what I’m saying - iPhones have traditionally come with less memory than Android phones of the Dane generation. Apple has been able to get away with it.
There's no such thing as "how little RAM you can get away with". A user is always better served by having more RAM. The limiting factor is the monetary budget, not the power budget. If a manufacturer puts less RAM on a computer it's only to cut costs, not as a power optimization. Compared to the CPU, RAM is free, power-wise. In fact, since optimizing for space is often in opposition to optimizing for time, having more RAM can save power by saving time spent computing things.
>So should Apple have also kept the PPC emulator around for Macs?
I'm not really interested in discussing what compatibility support should be included in any given OS. It's not the topic of discussion. The topic of discussion is whether cutting x86 support from x86-64 processors would result in significant power savings, and I maintain that it wouldn't. It would result in at best marginal power savings at the cost of a useful feature.