I admit I find it amusing that an Opteron architect who worked on the draft for x86-64, who clearly had a major impact on x86 and AMD as a company, is a Mac guy, and now an ARM guy, too. (Yes, I know you chose to work on RISC designs, it's just AMD where you apparently had the most impact on the entire PC market.) Before I got my first Mac mini, I was all-in on PCs. On a whim I installed the Intel beta of Tiger on my PC, got my first Mac in 2005, and left PCs behind. Back when I was young and stupid, I hated Apple and the Mac, and even owned stock in Intel and Microsoft. Now that I've grown to be old and stupid, I have a hard time swallowing the concept of building a PC, even if just for gaming.
I know you like to tell your "vim story", as I call it, from back in the day. Didn't you also work on SPARC,
@Cmaier, or at least interview with them? I could never get a handle on Sun. I had a meeting with a Sun Microsystems representative, at the FOSE trade show, where they were showing off the latest and greatest from their labs. Instead of concentrating on the company's latest workstations, the rep kept trying to sell me on
classic Mac OS emulation on Solaris. The only reason I remember this, or indeed that they built a Mac OS emulator, was because the lady who was peddling Sun's wares kept insisting that it's "emulation, but it's fast!". Somehow, she took it as a personal affront that I was skeptical that emulating Mac OS on Solaris wasn't performant enough, and she felt it necessary to convince me otherwise. I had no need for the emulator, the meeting was a waste, but it made an impact, because I still remember it to this day.