> RISC-V doesn't have the pitfalls of Sparc (register windows, branch delay slots),

You're saying ISA design does have implementation performance implications then? ;)

> There's no one that expects it'll be hard to optimize for

[Raises hand]

> There are at least 2 designs that have taped out in small runs and have high end performance.

Are these public?

Edit: I should add, I'm well aware of the cultural mismatch between HN and the semi industry, and have been caught in it more than a few times, but I also know the semi industry well enough to not trust anything they say. (Everything from well meaning but optimistic through to outright malicious depending on the company).

The 2 designs I'm thinking of are (tiresomely) under NDA, although I'm sure others will be able to say what they are. Last November I had a sample of one of them in my hand and played with the silicon at their labs, running a bunch of AI workloads. They didn't let me take notes or photographs.

> There's no one that expects it'll be hard to optimize for

No one who is an expert in the field, and we (at Red Hat) talk to them routinely.

Expert here, are these made for general purpose workloads or do you expect them to be fast for AI only?

I assume the TensTorrent TT-Ascalon is one of the CPU designs.