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@Demolishun
Technically the "CISC on RISC" architecture is described as an interpreter, but i guess, those two terms are pretty much interchangeable these days. -
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Pyjong10935yI know one guy, he likes to go about RISC with this subtle difference in how you put brackets around the words. Normally RISC is Reduced (Instruction Set) Computer, but for x86 he twists it to (Reduced Instruction) Set Computer. That way he doesn't need to give a shit which is which x))
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Once someone asked me if we could put their JVM in a container...
I said "thats not how that fucking works"! -
Pyjong10935y@IntrusionCM x86 is normally considered CISC but due to cisc instruction being shorter, (because its basically more simple instructions in one opcode) and due to x86 being unaligned you have a set of (reduced instructions)
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@Pyjong Most modern desktop processors have microcode internally. Which is normally RISC.
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