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79 points saubeidl | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.26s | source
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lofaszvanitt ◴[] No.44390917[source]
Apple is already a big, festering, malignant growth. The EU needs to jump in with both feet to let all that pus out.
replies(4): >>44390929 #>>44390940 #>>44391581 #>>44391720 #
scottyah ◴[] No.44391581[source]
But they're basically the only large scale consumer computational hardware company driving actual, stable innovation?
replies(1): >>44391876 #
simplyinfinity ◴[] No.44391876[source]
What have they innovated in the last 10 years?
replies(1): >>44392153 #
saubeidl ◴[] No.44392153[source]
I'm not an Apple fan by any means. But I think it's fair to say that Apple Silicon and actually useful ARM-powered laptops was a major hardware innovation.
replies(1): >>44392428 #
1. bigyabai ◴[] No.44392428[source]
It kinda feels like Apple Silicon was the exception to the rule. And even then, a lot of the innovation is hardly Apple's to claim:

- ARM is not Apple IP, it's owned by SoftBank and licensed to Apple at rates low enough that it's impossible to undercut them.

- TSMC's 5nm manufacturing capacity was entirely bought-out for Apple Silicon, blocking other OEMs from competing on equal footing.

- The SOC team, who arguably did the most innovation of all, was gutted with the founding of Nuvia immediately after Apple Silicon's launch.