Testing "Volterra" - Microsoft's Windows Dev Kit 2023 ARM PC

Ғылым және технология

The Windows Developer Kit 2023 ('Project Volterra') is like an M1 Mac mini for Windows. Except it has an upgradeable SSD.
But is it fast enough? And why didn't they just call it the Surface Desktop?
Mentioned in this video:
- Microsoft Windows Dev Kit 2023: www.microsoft.com/en-us/d/win...
- M1 Mac mini: www.apple.com/mac-mini/
- Alex Ellis' Blog post on Linux on the Dev Kit: blog.alexellis.io/linux-on-mi...
- My review of the Dot 1 Mini PC (Microsoft's Wasted Potential): • Microsoft's wasted pot...
- Blog post with more detail: www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/202...
Support me on Patreon: / geerlingguy
Sponsor me on GitHub: github.com/sponsors/geerlingguy
Merch: redshirtjeff.com
2nd Channel: / geerlingengineering
Contents:
00:00 - Windows on what?
01:44 - Tearing it down
03:26 - Windows on ARM
04:33 - Benchmarks
07:42 - Linux support
09:13 - Hope

Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын

    I mentioned I had trouble getting the Mini DisplayPort connection working with any of my monitors. Apparently, Microsoft's Dev Kit 2023 documentation states: > If connecting an HDMI monitor to the mDP port, an active mini-DP to HDMI adapter is required. All the adapters I have are passive. So I just bought a cheap active miniDP to HDMI adapter and I re-tested with that-I can confirm an *active* mDP to HDMI adapter works! It can be hard to tell if yours is active or not... most are not even marked.

  • @bland9876

    @bland9876

    Жыл бұрын

    Why didn't you just run a display port cable to the DisplayPort on the monitor? Why try converting it to HDMI?

  • @dmynerd78

    @dmynerd78

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bland9876 It looks like he's routing the output to a capture card at 3:29 (which is basically always HDMI). Still watching the video so I'm not sure if he's done miniDP to DP, but that's probably why he tried to use HDMI at least.

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bland9876 I tried that with a Mini DisplayPort to DisplayPort cable first-and apparently I just didn't leave that cable plugged in long enough. It takes like 3-5 minutes on first boot before any signal comes through! But I also use the DisplayPort input for my main computer, so it was less convenient than my HDMI input :)

  • @teg24601

    @teg24601

    Жыл бұрын

    WTF uses an active mDP to HDMI adapter? There shouldn't be any processing needed to go from mDP to DP to HDMI to DVI-D.

  • @Flynn58

    @Flynn58

    Жыл бұрын

    honestly wild that it requires an active adapter, I figured most Displayport chipsets support DP++ now

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Жыл бұрын

    What a weird looking Raspberry Pi!

  • @ernstoud

    @ernstoud

    Жыл бұрын

    At least it is available!

  • @user-iq2rz3sd8b

    @user-iq2rz3sd8b

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ernstoud 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @quimblyjones9767

    @quimblyjones9767

    Жыл бұрын

    Costs about the same

  • @germani69

    @germani69

    Жыл бұрын

    what a weird looking mac mini

  • @bannanafruitsalad

    @bannanafruitsalad

    Жыл бұрын

    More like a pumpkin pi

  • @minxythemerciless
    @minxythemerciless Жыл бұрын

    For the record, there was Windows on ARM over 20 years ago. That was the Compaq Ipaq and HP equivalent. It actually ran quite fast. The Windows was cut down especially the GDI so I had many happy hours recreating the missing GDI functions such as Bezier curves and all in fixed point arithmetic!

  • @RaduTek

    @RaduTek

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, Windows CE, which was available for many architectures, x86, ARM, MIPS, SH3. Apps can either be compiled to native CPU code and aren't cross architecture compatible, but then .NET Compact Framework came along, with cross architecture apps.

  • @sihamhamda47

    @sihamhamda47

    Жыл бұрын

    From the "less known and less supported architecture" to "most potential architecture to overtake x86" Things are changing really fast in the recent years

  • @AndreVanKammen

    @AndreVanKammen

    Жыл бұрын

    Wasn't that running on Windows CE? The version of Windows for PDA's and smartphones and embeded devices. They actualy had a head start in the whole SmartPhone market in the beginning of this century but lost it by sticking to resistive pen input and bad UI for way to long.I owned a HTC HD2 in 2009 which ran on windows mobile 6.5, it had a capacitive screen that worked fine for the HTC apps that HTC added with support for big fingers, but all the other apps where hard to control with fingers. I later installed android on that phone. I worked on some stuff for an embeded terminal on windows CE. Later we tried to make a version of an app for the windows phone, but Microsft kept changing the target from "It's gonna be a Silverlight super/subset" to "universal apps" . We lost so much time developing for Windows Mobile we stopped working on it, Microsoft did to little to late and lost the whole mobile market because of it.

  • @poohhappy4548

    @poohhappy4548

    Жыл бұрын

    i rembered seeing an artical saying imaging a chrome book but more limited app support

  • @christophertstone

    @christophertstone

    Жыл бұрын

    Windows CE was not the same kernel as Windows 9x or Windows NT. It was a whole other product, using the "Windows" name. Windows RT was a build of Windows NT 6.3 (Win8.1) for ARM, but that wasn't 20 years ago.

  • @niklasxl
    @niklasxl Жыл бұрын

    i hope that in the future there will be more arm and risc-v systems available, the efficiency seem so good on them :D

  • @oggilein1

    @oggilein1

    Жыл бұрын

    For mobile devices absolutely, for desktop I'd love to see IBM's openPOWER architecture become more prevalent Machines like the talos II and blackbird have already shown success in the workstation space and I could imagine if valve gave POWER the same treatment they gave arm in terms of gaming that it could become a popular architecture among enthusiasts The SMT8 function is especially interesting since it essentially means single core applications can be spread out to run on 8 cores which leads to a huge boost in performance with no extra effort on the developer's part

  • @hermanwooster8944

    @hermanwooster8944

    Жыл бұрын

    ARM in the next 5 years. RISC-V in the next 30.

  • @infinitytec
    @infinitytec Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad Microsoft put this device out. ARM certainly looks to be the future at this time, and this seems like Microsoft is actually getting serious about it this time.

  • @fdmillion

    @fdmillion

    Жыл бұрын

    I definitely want one to play with. Might end up being one of my next "geek purchases"! (I am a dev, mostly Python and such but I've done some .NET desktop dev in C#, and I could definitely have fun with WSL and Visual Studio on here.)

  • @thisisnotok2100

    @thisisnotok2100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fdmillion the coding you described is the same on x86, do you just like computers?

  • @jothain

    @jothain

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thisisnotok2100 Well just think about the performance/power consumption ratio. If one uses computer for extended periods of time, this might actually pay itself in long run on many countries eletric bills.

  • @nathanjokeley4102

    @nathanjokeley4102

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@jothain performance/power consumption ratio? it gets outperformed at least 5-10 times in power efficiency compared to ryzen laptop cpu. it can't even run youtube videos without dropping frames and it's running 20+ year old games like half life at 20 fps. how high is energy price if you think going lower than 15-25 watts that 6800u is using will make any noticeable difference in energy bills? have you even calculated it?

  • @jothain

    @jothain

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nathanjokeley4102 dropped YT frames is decoding issue. Just like rpi's. If power costs like 0,6Euro/kWh it's noticeable costs in 24/7 usage. Thing is still, why use something that uses more electricity if you don't need it?

  • @wl4dymir
    @wl4dymir Жыл бұрын

    WAIT YOU ARE geerlingguy who wrote all of those ansible modules ! I used a bunch of your code some time ago for a project it's actually very well written and runs cleanly. Thanks a lot for that work !

  • @izzieb
    @izzieb Жыл бұрын

    To me, it's still a good step forward for Windows on ARM irrelevant of how it compares to the ARM Macs. Especially considering it's intended as a development kit and not a commercial product.

  • @JasperJanssen

    @JasperJanssen

    Жыл бұрын

    The Apple devkit with the A12Z was pretty shit as well. Here’s hoping MS makes the same progress.

  • @Shotblur

    @Shotblur

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you think devkits are for? Expect comparable performance on whatever device this winds up being a devkit for.

  • @GodlyAwesome

    @GodlyAwesome

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Shotblur devkits arent performant, usually just enough to run what they need to get done.

  • @JasperJanssen

    @JasperJanssen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Shotblur one thing devkits are absolutely not for is giving you an idea of the speed of the finished product. That’s not even true of console devkits for the most part.

  • @jnharton

    @jnharton

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GodlyAwesome That seems a bit harsh. An important element though is that no dev kit should be significantly superior than release hardware. Otherwise developed applications might run worse on actual, retail systems...

  • @GustavoNoronha
    @GustavoNoronha Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Given this is a developer-focused platform, how about a couple of development workloads? People seem to have standardized on building Chromium / Firefox / LLVM. That last one may be easier to get going on Windows for Arm, I guess.

  • @the_hetman
    @the_hetman Жыл бұрын

    I’m pretty sure that Microsoft has an exclusive deal with Qualcomm for Windows on ARM, although I’m not sure that anyone knows for sure or when it will run out. Apple has made it clear that they would be willing to help Microsoft port Windows to M1/M2 but there seems to be no movement there. I’m sure that by the time that there are faster CPUs from Qualcomm, Apple will have pushed the bar even further.

  • @suigeneris886

    @suigeneris886

    Жыл бұрын

    Hilarious considering how, on the gaming front, M$ is trying get Sony (and Nintendo) to implement Game Pass on their hardware only to be rejected, yet they likely don't want to work with Apple. This is literally the same situation with the shoe being on the other foot 🤣

  • @GoogleDoesEvil

    @GoogleDoesEvil

    Жыл бұрын

    @@suigeneris886 Not really, Microsoft is locked into an exclusive deal with Snapdragon and isn't able to port Windows over to M1/M2 until that contract is over. I think that contract still has a couple years left on it.

  • @TomFoolery9001

    @TomFoolery9001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@suigeneris886 Why would microsoft not want their OS also on macs? Seems it is in their best interest to get their OS everywhere.

  • @sirgongalong

    @sirgongalong

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GoogleDoesEvil They are probably beating themselves for that deal now. Although tbf there probably aren’t any better alternatives out there at the moment that I can think of outside Apple and Apple M series will only ever be available in Apple HW and Intel doesn’t believe in ARM (although the microcores in their CPU are arm)?

  • @gatocochino5594

    @gatocochino5594

    Жыл бұрын

    ''I’m pretty sure that Microsoft has an exclusive deal with Qualcomm for Windows on ARM,'' This has been confirmed to be false. There is no exclusivity deal.

  • @jjdawg9918
    @jjdawg9918 Жыл бұрын

    Great thorough review Jeff!. I know it's an aside but these little guys and other NUC like PCs always have me wanting for a slick nice looking "modular" PC(preferably on Linux) but they always lack enough I/O. Just think of being able to add a matching 5 bay HDD case, maybe an eGPU, that sits/docks under this. You would have nice portable workstation/nas/server/gaming rig

  • @MastermindAtWork
    @MastermindAtWork Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Jeff for reviewing this this cause I was waiting for someone other than Microsoft devs to talk about it and see if it was ready for personally use.

  • @DavidAlsh
    @DavidAlsh Жыл бұрын

    Best summary about the Volterra hardware so far. You answered every question I had. Thanks Jeff!

  • @harshvaragiya8834
    @harshvaragiya8834 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome review! Was interested in this as a random server to run some weird projects. Thanks for the review. I'll wait till i see some really good ARM desktop with native linux support! Cheers

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    I still have a little hope-since this is somewhat an 'official' machine from Microsoft, and seems to be widely available, the community might be able to get at least the basics up and running in Linux. We'll see. If not, it's definitely the best option for *Windows* on ARM. For what that's worth :)

  • @australai

    @australai

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@JeffGeerling Hey Jeff, it's worth noting that Lenovo's X13S Snapdragon is essentially a laptop version of this new Microsoft dev kit, and was released earlier this year. Linux is bootable on it, thanks to Lenovo's Linux Technical Lead (see: kzread.info/dash/bejne/i4uGxLCol7WohNo.html )

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    @@australai Yeah; I was following along with that development and it is great! A few people have tried applying the same changes to a custom kernel build for the Dev Kit and haven't yet been successful, so it looks like more work will be required. Hopefully someone in the community can knock it out though-this would make a great little ARM desktop for Linux!

  • @hassosigbjoernson5738

    @hassosigbjoernson5738

    Жыл бұрын

    This dev kit is about getting more apps and stuff on Windows. And people only talk about and hope for Linux support? So Windows (!) on ARM is already dead? Disappointing.

  • @drinkintea1572
    @drinkintea1572 Жыл бұрын

    0:59 that made my day, thank you so much

  • @billmccaffrey1977
    @billmccaffrey1977 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the review Jeff. You make it easy for guys like me to stay on top of these developments.

  • @Namudril
    @Namudril Жыл бұрын

    Had to think for a moment what "ransom benchmarks" are =) Great job, thank so much! (misspelling fixed)

  • @mannkeithc
    @mannkeithc Жыл бұрын

    Great video. Microsoft ARM Dev Kit is a step in the right direction. Hopefully, Qualcomm and ARM will resolve their licensing dispute regarding Nuvia, and we will get to see the higher performance ARM laptop and server chips developed by the ex-Apple Silicon engineers who formed Nuvia. Re: Fitting a 2280 SSD to the Dev Kit, I thought you move the pillar from the 2230 position to where the flat torx head screw is?

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    That screw is unfortunately not in the right location for a 2280 standoff.

  • @mannkeithc

    @mannkeithc

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeffGeerling OK. So, M.2 2230 SSDs only or fabricate a support bracket that connects to 2230 pillar screw hole and provides a new pillar at the 2280 position, as there looks like there is enough space for a M.2 2280 drive.

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mannkeithc Yep, that's probably the best way. There is definitely room, and I'm not sure why Microsoft didn't thread holes to reposition the standoff... it seems like such a logical addition.

  • @fram1111
    @fram1111 Жыл бұрын

    Great job Jeff, I'm rotting for a powerful ARM Windows/Linux machine. I think this may be a good first step.

  • @RandyHanley
    @RandyHanley Жыл бұрын

    I have to agree about the part about it seeming like a surface inside a case. Even the SSD looks like the removable SSDs on the newer surfaces, such as the Surface Pro 8, etc.

  • @RobSnyder
    @RobSnyder Жыл бұрын

    Loved how Jeff said the fastest ( Certified ) arm system to run windows on arm, as I look over at my windows 11 arm vm on my M1 Ultra

  • @NaoRose
    @NaoRose Жыл бұрын

    I have a Lenovo X13S, same processor as the Dev Kit and I have gotten both Arch and Debian working on it thanks to community guides!

  • @jamescameron1861
    @jamescameron1861 Жыл бұрын

    I like the look of this, but I need that Linux support. Windows is my day job, but I'm slowly taking my first tentative steps on Linux for home use. I'll be following this device to see if anything interesting happens

  • @BitCrazed

    @BitCrazed

    Жыл бұрын

    Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) lets you run real Linux apps & tools alongside Windows, side-by-side, giving you the entirety of the Linux platform & toolchain.

  • @_DJ_Mikey
    @_DJ_Mikey Жыл бұрын

    In regards to your point about the nvme slot not having a 2280 stand off. Is that other small torx screw in the correct position? Maybe it's designed to take out that flush screw and swap the posistions of the stand off with the flush screw? Just a thought..

  • @xomm
    @xomm Жыл бұрын

    Worth noting is that the 8cx Gen 3 is a year old now, and have Cortex X1+A78 which is a two year old combo. So there's headroom architecturally speaking for an 8cx Gen 4.

  • @jhohisel
    @jhohisel Жыл бұрын

    I have a ThinkPad X13s which is also powered by the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3. I never booted Windows and ripped out the SSD to bootstrap Ubuntu 22.10. Within 8 hours I was able to get it to boot using the work in development by Linaro developers. Overall it's a nice lightweight Linux laptop and runs it quite well, but no accelerated graphics or suspend support yet. I also have an M1 Mac mini and M1 Max MacBook Pro, and as you found out it's still slower than M1. Also, as a developer who supports apps on Mac/Windows/Linux, I see little value at this point in providing a native arm64 binary for Windows. Despite having poor performance, for simple apps the x86 emulation is good enough.

  • @Jansel_osu
    @Jansel_osu Жыл бұрын

    ngl, this was one of the better informative videos about it. I am looking forward where Windows on ARM will go, especially for potentially gaming.

  • @Quast

    @Quast

    Жыл бұрын

    Kinda doubt it take a look a notebookcheck and see what Arm machines get what frame rates, it was rather disappointing.

  • @Jansel_osu

    @Jansel_osu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Quast i think you didn't really understand my comment. I was saying that I like to see what possibilities the future holds, so these compability and framerate issues maybe disappear

  • @Quast

    @Quast

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jansel_osu Just saying, give it a look.

  • @Owl-cj3fu
    @Owl-cj3fu Жыл бұрын

    @Jeff Geerling, I'm pretty sure you could fit a longer SSD into the slot if you unscrewed the standoff and swapped it with the fastener that's shown right where the mounting point for the longer SSD would be.

  • @jctrowbridge
    @jctrowbridge Жыл бұрын

    I learn so much from each of your videos! Thanks for making great content 🙂

  • @clebbington
    @clebbington Жыл бұрын

    That Rosetta VM test made my jaw drop. I thought Rosetta was so fast because it took advantage of the custom silicon; I never would have expected it to work so well on a Snapdragon chip 😮

  • @RomaniaOverpowered

    @RomaniaOverpowered

    Жыл бұрын

    As much as Apple customized their ARM M1 chips, the base lithography is still ARM from Snapdragon. So, it makes sense it would. What scares me the most is that ARM processors on desktop platforms would eventually lead to the cloud computing future I never asked for. The less you can execute code locally, the more you'll be dragged in some more and more cloud options with 0 arhivistic options, always online, DRM to hell and back machines....

  • @monad_tcp

    @monad_tcp

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RomaniaOverpowered cloud computing is also moving to ARM. your dark future of archivistic options will happen regardless, as long as you have cloud computing like client/server. I wanted more Edge-Computing. You don't really need any cloud. I run everything I ever need computing for in just 2x ThreadRipper servers with 256GB of RAM each in my house. Everything I ever need I have very close to my devices. The only exception is doing machine learning, but then I use pre-trained models, who has $2M for buying GPUs, or spending $35K on Bezos ? $35K buys you one of those massive modern servers. You absolutely don't need cloud computing, unless you don't know anything under your virtual machine, be it the Chrome or NodeJS, as per usual lack of developer knowledge of anything hardware related.

  • @RomaniaOverpowered

    @RomaniaOverpowered

    Жыл бұрын

    @@monad_tcp yeah, but power users as such are becoming less likely to be a thing, as hardware devs and manufacturers change focus.

  • @clebbington

    @clebbington

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RomaniaOverpowered I have good news and bad news. Bad news is, society is already at the point of mostly using thin clients to connect to cloud based services - no miracle device is going to change that trajectory. Good news is, there will always be people who are like us; people who want to see what computers are capable of, people who want to build their own servers, etc. Also, while ARM is used for plenty of low powered devices, I'm hoping advances in the ARM desktop and ARM server markets will give enthusiasts efficient but powerful chips to mess around with

  • @BringMayFlowers

    @BringMayFlowers

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RomaniaOverpowered ...how is that supposed to happen? ISA choice shouldn't mean much for local execution. Especially not ARM, which is from the '80s. The main issues I could see would be manufacturers moving toward a chromebook model of design, but that can and has been done on amd64 as well. Nothing about ARM inherently creates that webapp future.

  • @FUZxxl
    @FUZxxl Жыл бұрын

    As for open source operating systems, both FreeBSD and OpenBSD are in a state where they work well on the Dev Kit!

  • @51munz
    @51munz Жыл бұрын

    Dude,,, this is really a great review. Love how deep you go. Impressed

  • @zil6470
    @zil6470 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your work and this video! Keep up the good work!

  • @lucaballardini1
    @lucaballardini1 Жыл бұрын

    As a Linux nerd I'm hoping fast arm chips will be more obtainable and open in the future. As porting to arm is much less of a problem if you're already in the FOSS ecosystem. And the benefits, especially for portables are huge.

  • @antocmartinaemz

    @antocmartinaemz

    Жыл бұрын

    The best I found is the pinebook pro, with an opensource firmware in a 16mB flash spi and a linux os on it

  • @lucaballardini1

    @lucaballardini1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@antocmartinaemz Is it able to do hardware encoding/decoding of video? This is the major downside of most tinker arm solutions if you'd want to use them as a desktop. Also I do own a RockPro64 and while its already faster than RPi3 etc. it's still nothing compared to Qualcomm chips.

  • @antocmartinaemz

    @antocmartinaemz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucaballardini1 yeah, but they are really expensive and you need to be an enterprise to be allowed to buy their dev board and get access to the tools :/

  • @JasonsLabVideos
    @JasonsLabVideos Жыл бұрын

    Awesome Video Jeff, this is so good! I think the New release unit they should have a 2.5gig port and USB c ports on the back, along with a 1tb ssd & 64gigs ram.

  • @BitCrazed

    @BitCrazed

    Жыл бұрын

    The SSD in the DevKit is end-user replaceable so you can replace with 1TB storage if you like :)

  • @JasonsLabVideos

    @JasonsLabVideos

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BitCrazed or a 2tb :) but my point was if they roll them out they could start at 1tb.

  • @ruevs
    @ruevs Жыл бұрын

    Windows NT has had versions for x86, MIPS, Alpha, Itanium, x64 and now ARM. It's pretty portable from "day one" but the platforms were not particularly popular.

  • @jesset2550
    @jesset2550 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Jeff what arm extensions does it have. I'm wondering if it has arm virtualization extensions(VHE) in lscpu.

  • @nathanbasset
    @nathanbasset Жыл бұрын

    With how impressive the M series has been so far, Windows on ARM is a question of when not if. I can’t wait.

  • @gokuaravind

    @gokuaravind

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn’t M series primarily microcontrollers? I think the efficiency and performance of A cores are the ones that are driving the push for Windows on Arm .

  • @ivoszbg589

    @ivoszbg589

    9 ай бұрын

    @@gokuaravindhe probably meant m1 and m2 macs

  • @artvram
    @artvram Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Would love this if it could boot Linux natively

  • @OffBy0x01
    @OffBy0x0110 ай бұрын

    Curious how many watts the cooling fan is consuming and how much impact that had on the idle & max usage.

  • @JohnMitchellCalif
    @JohnMitchellCalif Жыл бұрын

    I was very curious, thanks so much! And, Alex Ellis is a national treasure

  • @drowne2
    @drowne2 Жыл бұрын

    Much has changed since the days of Acorn computers. Always hopeful for Microsoft; yet, they often disappoint. Great review, Jeff.

  • @vincelongman3264
    @vincelongman3264 Жыл бұрын

    Despite the old X1/A78 cores and Samsung 5nm, this is still the first decent WoA chip. Hopefully next year we get X3/A715 cores (or Nuvia's Pheonix cores) and TSMC 5nm

  • @siddestroyer

    @siddestroyer

    Жыл бұрын

    It will be Nuvia cores by then. Hopefully they'd be up to the mark

  • @sourav7162

    @sourav7162

    Жыл бұрын

    8 gen 2 gonna have the A16 level of multicore score. So, by extrapolating the next pc arm chip from Qualcomm would have M1 pro level performance atleast in multicore

  • @charliemaybe
    @charliemaybe Жыл бұрын

    I would love to see laptops with ARM so the theoretical max wattage a gpu can utilize will be higher as well as longer battery life. Maybe someday, gaming laptops can be running over 200 watts with the gpu alone and not even 35 watts with the cpu, that would be really cool for performance because I think the max is around 165 watts for top end laptop gpu. Since laptops right now are thermally limited in the gpu/ cpu loads, being able to go higher on the gpu while keeping up with the cpu using ARM would be huge for the performance laptop space.

  • @JohnPMiller
    @JohnPMiller Жыл бұрын

    This was very useful. Thank you!

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse Жыл бұрын

    Coil whine isn't just annoying, it's also physical damage. Of course the thought occurs to me that if you can run Linux with WSL on that machine that it shouldn't be too difficult to reverse engineer it. Although, for that price and with those specs, probably not worth the hassle. I don't think anyone is going to replace the Pi or any of its clones this way, or make affordable and attractive desktop ARM devices that actually perform.

  • @ArandomNutter
    @ArandomNutter Жыл бұрын

    It's a dev box, they aren't going to throw out all the stops. Lets see what there production offering looks like

  • @Malcicus
    @Malcicus Жыл бұрын

    1:57 lol, that power brick is from surface dock Gen1 :D

  • @Japhgar
    @Japhgar Жыл бұрын

    I am really curious abou those mysterious internal connectors. Could it be possible to connecto some exciting boards to it, ro something? :D

  • @toerti9589
    @toerti9589 Жыл бұрын

    They had Windows on ARM with the old Windows Mobile/CE and later Windows RT, they were ahead of the pack, but they fumbled it. Should have just allowed native win32 development and compilation for Windows RT instead of forcing everyone to use WinRT.

  • @tramcrazy
    @tramcrazy Жыл бұрын

    A really cool dev kit. Nice to have an easy way to test stuff for woa. Would be cool if they built an official arm surface desktop though, or even an atx arm motherboard… although that seems very unlikely.

  • @michaelbishton9439
    @michaelbishton9439 Жыл бұрын

    I like your thoughtful and what I consider to be fair evaluations. Thanks.

  • @eformance
    @eformance Жыл бұрын

    Curious point about pricing: The no-warranty repair cost for most Surface Pro tablets is $600.

  • @keco185
    @keco185 Жыл бұрын

    Apple designed the M1 with X86 emulation in mind. It has hardware to help with that emulation. Qualcomm really needs to do the same. Especially because windows programs are taking way longer than macos programs to get converted over to arm

  • @tjmichael
    @tjmichael Жыл бұрын

    I believe M1 and M2 have some hardware emulation to help with Rosetta's excellent x86 emulation, and I fear that without something similar we'll just never see the same result on Windows machines.

  • @haraberu

    @haraberu

    Жыл бұрын

    On the other hand, Apple is going to drop Rosetta support by the time M4 comes out, while Microsoft is going to keep x86 emulation support indefinitely. For reference, support for the last 32-bit-compatible MacOS ended in October 2021 (old 32-bit apps can no longer be used), support for the last 16-bit-compatible Windows will end in October 2025 (old 16-bit apps require WineVDM, a community project not officially supported by Microsoft).

  • @tjmichael

    @tjmichael

    Жыл бұрын

    @@haraberu were windows on ARM anything but an almost exclusive cooperation between Microsoft and Qualcomm, I'd agree with you, but given it looks like all these SKUs are Windows specific, I think it'd be a fair tradeoff for them to carry x86 hardware emulation for a significant amount of time, until software emulation becomes enough to handle the older software that can't be ported.

  • @BrVendan

    @BrVendan

    Жыл бұрын

    Windows 10 still supported 16-bit apps. Let’s put that into perspective

  • @tjmichael

    @tjmichael

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BrVendan sure, but notably all these versions of windows ran on CPUs with hardware level support for "x86 real mode" (16 bit operation), and this was never exclusively a software level emulation, and might even be a proof case that hardware level support is needed to push the PC market towards new instruction sets.

  • @gamingkingX
    @gamingkingX Жыл бұрын

    For a netwokring device (router fx) you could buy USB to erthernet adapters. I cant find the speed rating on any ports, but 2.5GbE USB adapters are pretty cheap.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera Жыл бұрын

    I have a Samsung ARM laptop running Windows, and it works great. I wish it had more disk space, but that's a completely different issue. The ARM CPU sips power like nobody's business, and it can even run some games without a dedicated GPU.

  • @matter7180
    @matter7180 Жыл бұрын

    Apple said they would be open to Bootcamp Windows on ARM? Why didn't Microsoft just make that possible? Apparently a Mac Mini is faster and also production/consumer ready + makes software development for both platforms really viable.

  • @simply6162

    @simply6162

    Жыл бұрын

    Cause that would destroy Microsoft . The apple chips would run windows better than windows themselves and that’s not good for windows

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd love to see Microsoft support Apple Silicon; I mean, it's a better dev experience for Windows on ARM than any of the official Windows on ARM devices!

  • @simply6162

    @simply6162

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeffGeerling that’s exactly why Microsoft won’t make it happen.

  • @WackyFolf

    @WackyFolf

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s because Microsoft has an exclusivity deal with Qualcomm. They legally can’t until it expires.

  • @jonisin5498

    @jonisin5498

    Жыл бұрын

    You believe every Apple say?

  • @nytrex2001
    @nytrex2001 Жыл бұрын

    It's seems like a pretty good deal. 32GB with 521GB storage is unheard of at that price point. Qualcomm's Nuvia SOC being released in Q4 next year should see it easily match Apple's M1 and M2 silicon.

  • @DementedView
    @DementedView Жыл бұрын

    In one of their videos they showed these devices stacking on top of another. And I was curious if you could scale their performance by chaining them. If that's the case that would make them a very interesting product.

  • @robgreen13
    @robgreen13 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Jeff, a great review. I agree that this machine isn't quite ready to be a mainstream consumer device, but for its intended purpose my initial experience is very positive and I'm now using it to port a C++ financial modelling tool to arm64. I don't expect many clients will want to use it on the desktop/laptop, but they might want to run the Linux/arm64 version on cloud instances. Either way, I'm going to enjoy the work of doing this port on this machine which is plenty fast enough to build and test. It is a shame it wasn't available a few years ago, but now I've got it I'm just looking forward.

  • @jakeparkinson8929
    @jakeparkinson8929 Жыл бұрын

    I think it would be attractive as a basic office computer/thin client pc, if microsoft offered it at the third of the price with 8gb ram, 128gb storage and cut back on some other features. It would be awesome for hobbyists as Windows on Arm can run android apps, which means this thing can very solidly run everything up to wii/3ds/ps2 in terms of emulation where some laptops at that price point struggle. Remember the Surface Go line of computers, or the Surface RT, bring it back. Windows isnt locked down like it used to be in 2012 on Windows 8RT. You can install programs and benefit from a long battery life. Literally, I don't think the average "professional" that sits in board room all day sipping coffee while being lectured needs a powerhouse of hardware for basic office work and emails. Its good stuff.

  • @xPandamon

    @xPandamon

    Жыл бұрын

    8 GB of RAM and a 128 GB SSD for 200? That's not very realistic.. At that price point they won't make any money off of it or even lose some as hardware dost itself isn't the only thing stacking up, development us expensive too

  • @misakidebugged
    @misakidebugged Жыл бұрын

    I would really love for Microsoft to just send an open letter to AMD and intel to make ARM CPU's for windows so we can standardize it, the efficiency is simply undeafeatable. Of course this would mean deopping that pesky exclusivity deal with Qualcomm. And then make Windows 12 exclusively ARM, They will have to work very very hard on getting their x86 emulation layer optimized first though.

  • @xBINARYGODx

    @xBINARYGODx

    Жыл бұрын

    if there is a deal, its a contract - they cant just drop it

  • @misakidebugged

    @misakidebugged

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xBINARYGODx Yep. Thankfully I hear its expiring soon.. it would be suicidal for Microsoft to renew it

  • @cnex101
    @cnex101 Жыл бұрын

    Jeff, how does the Windows Dev kit run media apps? Such as Plex, Jellyfin? Does it encode or decode H264 / H265 media very well?

  • @dgsprysoup

    @dgsprysoup

    Жыл бұрын

    Exact question in my mind!

  • @Ericxx-yx4rk
    @Ericxx-yx4rk Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video. "After I sorted that out...". I feel I have to ask because some future Internet searcher is going to be looking for this, what did you do to "sort it out".

  • @deldarel
    @deldarel Жыл бұрын

    A lot of dev tools are mainly in Linux. It'd be nice if they properly added support for it. I know you just use a tool chain, but it'd be nice to natively run the program you just ported.

  • @BitCrazed

    @BitCrazed

    Жыл бұрын

    Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) lets you run real Linux apps & tools alongside Windows, side-by-side, giving you the entirety of the Linux platform & toolchain. Also, MSYS2/CygWin provide Windows native POSIX-compatible command-line toolchain making it easier to build/port *NIX code on Windows.

  • @thisisnotok2100

    @thisisnotok2100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BitCrazed agree. Softwate development is now just as accesible on Windows as it is Linux. I will always be partial to VMs though ;)

  • @robgreen13

    @robgreen13

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BitCrazed Just got my Dev Kit and I'm heading for WSL as my first destination ... after checking out native arm64VS2022 first, of course, which is a real delight to see.

  • @moocow1452
    @moocow1452 Жыл бұрын

    Do you think we'll see Arm powered laptops and "Steam Deck" setups, and that will be the killer app for ARM computers, or is that a long way off?

  • @Daniel-ir4ki
    @Daniel-ir4ki Жыл бұрын

    It's probably a ceramic capacitor making that sound. Try probing caps with tweezers. The tweezers act like an amplifier.

  • @jierenzheng7670
    @jierenzheng7670 Жыл бұрын

    Have you tried comparing this one to the SolidRun HoneyComb LX? I am curious how it performs.

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Жыл бұрын

    BUT! Does it run -Crysis- I mean Linux?

  • @riklaunim

    @riklaunim

    Жыл бұрын

    Short answer no - unless Microsoft releases needed files/support. There was a full article on reddit testing this and WSL.

  • @amateurwizard
    @amateurwizard Жыл бұрын

    I've been calling Windows on ARM WOA for years in the hopes that it catches on... Help please

  • @JohnADoe-pg1qk

    @JohnADoe-pg1qk

    Жыл бұрын

    And looking into the next generation, we will call Windows on RISC V ... WORF [Windows On RISC Five]? 😂

  • @the_hetman

    @the_hetman

    Жыл бұрын

    Better than Windows CE. It always did make me wince. 😅

  • @SIGMAIntegrale
    @SIGMAIntegrale Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this. Appreciate it. Good analysis.

  • @getbluespheres3k
    @getbluespheres3k Жыл бұрын

    Cant wait to game on it!

  • @lee99bay
    @lee99bay Жыл бұрын

    We need fast windows 11 on raspberry pi!

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately I think we'll have to wait for another generation of Pi chip for that to be better. You can run Windows 10 on the Pi right now... but even that runs pretty slow. Windows 11 now requires some extensions to the 'ARMv8.1' instruction set, and those just aren't supported in the Pi's hardware. It would be really cool if Microsoft officially supported running Windows on the next Pi (whenever that happens) and M1 and M2 Macs!

  • @yorkshireplumbing

    @yorkshireplumbing

    Жыл бұрын

    We'll have to wait for a new generation of Windows, too.

  • @Chris_Cable
    @Chris_Cable Жыл бұрын

    But... It's literally a dev kit, you can't fairly compare it to full production units like a Mac Mini. Even if the MS unit is newer. Edit: Still a great video Jeff :)

  • @RunForPeace-hk1cu

    @RunForPeace-hk1cu

    Жыл бұрын

    Apologists coming out in droves ... LOL

  • @Chris_Cable

    @Chris_Cable

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RunForPeace-hk1cu Just stating facts... LOL

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    I hear this a lot, and I get it-though in my opinion, a dev kit should have higher-end specs (since developers hate sitting around waiting for compiles and such). But even if lower-end specs are the norm, a low-spec dev kit that's two years newer than the lowest-end consumer box from Apple should at least be trading punches, not running a lap or two behind. If I were a full time Windows dev I'd push for something faster, or demand Microsoft support development on Macs, since it's so much faster still.

  • @cyjanek7818

    @cyjanek7818

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah, you cant - devkits are usually better than production units So Microsoft has long Way to go

  • @RunForPeace-hk1cu

    @RunForPeace-hk1cu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Chris_Cable Fact is you are coping ... 😬 I bet you're not a developer nor are you using ARM OS. Otherwise, you should be very frustrated that Apple is destroying MS ass with products they release years ago ...

  • @danielforero2937
    @danielforero2937 Жыл бұрын

    I have been doing some testing in the device and it looks good so far, not the fastest but I was able to run a home server on it, wsl2 has 2 annoying things tho, you have to map the ports every time you restart or wake up your machine because the wsl ip changes, it also has a bug on the wsl clock it gets delayed, apparently that was solved in a recent windows update, I need to check later off is still happening after updating everything.

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    I really hope they can get hose little WSL bugs stomped out, it has a lot of promise!

  • @Z4KIUS
    @Z4KIUS10 ай бұрын

    to be fair the efficiency under load comes mostly from saner clocks, the thing is efficiency at idle, that's the big issue for classic x86

  • @Rostol
    @Rostol Жыл бұрын

    dear Jeff, you seem unable to grasp the concept of a developer kit pc. this is not a for-consumers device. this is not a benchmark setup. this is a testbed for developers to test ARM builds or compatibility. a 2.5 gbit ethernet would be pointless and add to the driver complexity which is why they're using an usb bridge and not pci lanes, developing a motherboard and soc specifically for this would be idiotic and pointless. wasting time on thermals to have a passive cooled device is lost time. this is not a beta for a future product release. this will NEVER be released as a consumer product. all these tests are pointless.

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    Dev kits should typically have _more_ speed than a baseline cheap consumer product, though. And in this case, it's the opposite. But in the entire conclusion, I mention many of the points you make - this is a good thing for Microsoft, and it's an interesting box. But I'm not yet sure if Microsoft's ARM push will persist and/or pay off. All bets are off.

  • @mttkl

    @mttkl

    Жыл бұрын

    Look at game console devkits, they all have much better hardware than the finished consumer product, a lot more ram, much much more network bandwidth, etc. These devices are intended to use heavily for development, with meh consumer hardware you are limiting what the devs can to push into it, specially in the early stages of development where optimization is not the priority.

  • @matgaw123
    @matgaw1237 ай бұрын

    Hey i have really important question Can you run linux on it now because You can run linux almost on any snapdragon and i was wandering if it would help with benchmark

  • @usefulrandom1855
    @usefulrandom1855 Жыл бұрын

    Ive always run a pretty power hungry gaming pc 12600k 2080ti at the minute. Hardly ever game and with electric prices in the UK its uses far too much power for the task I use it for. So I bought an M2 Pro Mac mini. One because I have never played around with Mac OS for more than 5 minutes and two due to the power consumption (I know the cost of the Mini offsets this but whatever). I just thought though, if we use ARM chips will Moors law be able to continue? Like what would happen if we had a say 125w ARM chip the size of a x86 desktop chip? Would it be massively powerful or is that too simplistic? Enjoying Mac OS so far but still getting used to it, only been a few days!

  • @ryanrankin7952
    @ryanrankin7952 Жыл бұрын

    I would be curious to see benchmark comparisons somewhere (anywhere lol) other than Geekbench.

  • @artificialtelemetry
    @artificialtelemetry9 ай бұрын

    BTW I head kernel 6.2 supports the 2023 dev kit it now. And I've seen recent posts of people getting it to work.

  • @CarlosAMaldonado
    @CarlosAMaldonado Жыл бұрын

    How about a gpu benchmark vd the m1 igpu?

  • @darkpowerxo
    @darkpowerxo Жыл бұрын

    Can you compare it with surface pro 9 (arm version )

  • @longnightsofsolace4010
    @longnightsofsolace4010 Жыл бұрын

    One thing to note is that while the cores used on the Dev kit are the contemporaries of the M1 (Cortex X1/A78), the manufacturing process is significantly worse (Samsung 5nm). Just see how big the gains QC made when porting the 8gen1+ to TSMC compared to the original 8g1 on Samsung. Would it be enough to match the M1, probably not but if it were made on TSMC it'd probably get 1200+/6000+ on GB5 and use less power.

  • @eslofftschubar206
    @eslofftschubar206 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Jeff, do you know how the power consumption compares to say an Intel NUC with similar specs? I guess the arm based computer should be more energy efficient, but by how much?

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    Slightly, but not as much as you'd think. The lower-end Atom CPUs Intel puts out are actually decent when it comes to performance per watt. I haven't tested in the past year or so, but unless you look at the lowest end in ARM, the victory was a bit narrower (< 20% efficiency win).

  • @eslofftschubar206

    @eslofftschubar206

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeffGeerling Thanks for your swift response! I was expecting something similar, thanks for confirming it.

  • @DavinderSingh-nx5ms
    @DavinderSingh-nx5ms Жыл бұрын

    The issues are not the arm chips but the software availablity. Many software house are not investing enough to make a properly multiplatform software

  • @MrMinecrafter720
    @MrMinecrafter720 Жыл бұрын

    @2:40 I think you can just remove the screw seen near the bottom left of frame and swap it with the standoff that holds a standard 2230 to allow for 2280 sized m.2 drives

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately that's not quite in the right location and doesn't hold a stand-off either (that screw is a bit smaller)

  • @MrMinecrafter720

    @MrMinecrafter720

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeffGeerling Ah that's unfortunate. The angle of camera must have lied to me

  • @AlmostBrokeLbs
    @AlmostBrokeLbs Жыл бұрын

    you can use core temp and gpu temp to see temps on windows

  • @kandleech

    @kandleech

    Жыл бұрын

    where?

  • @ayanesatomi4250
    @ayanesatomi425011 ай бұрын

    Do keep in mind this hardware isn't meant to be a consumer device, so don't expect too much on a reference hardware device. This is meant for developers who want to verify their application's behavior on a new architecture on a real device (since you can only test so much on a virtualized instance). Overall I'm impressed of the build quality of the device and the reviewer being authentic with the review of the device, would love to see more of it soon (I'd buy one but it's not available in SE Asia)

  • @aliyuabba4575
    @aliyuabba4575 Жыл бұрын

    How does it compare to the Apple Arm devkit with A12Z bionic?

  • @user-kk2vu4wy2z
    @user-kk2vu4wy2z Жыл бұрын

    the reason for Qualcomm's 8 cx 3 design is slower is because it still uses Cortex X1 designs, which were featured in Snapdragon 888 generation. IMO X2/X3 designs should provide higher clocks as well as better perf at iso-clocks.

  • @alvarofernandez5293
    @alvarofernandez5293 Жыл бұрын

    hello, trying to use it as a mac mini, can you use the adobe suite? besides obviously Office.

  • @Technocrat.
    @Technocrat. Жыл бұрын

    Question, does the Voltara Dev Kit have Power Options for High and Ultra high performance modes?

  • @davidnotonstinnett
    @davidnotonstinnett Жыл бұрын

    That would be Ubuntu 22.10 the first number tells you release year and the second release month, with Ubuntu releases happening in April and October each year (unless delayed, which has happened like once)

  • @wanderingwobb6300
    @wanderingwobb6300 Жыл бұрын

    I'd be glad to see windows on arm become the standard for low/mid range laptops. It just makes so much more sense. Hopefully this will help accelerate that process.

  • @jaykoerner
    @jaykoerner Жыл бұрын

    The Mac mini does support triple monitors, since displayport can be daisychained, granted that limits you to very specific monitors but it is technically possible

  • @BeLikeNexus

    @BeLikeNexus

    Жыл бұрын

    It doesn’t actually work, I’ve tried it

  • @jaykoerner

    @jaykoerner

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BeLikeNexus surprised apple blocked that...

  • @yt_reborngameplays
    @yt_reborngameplays Жыл бұрын

    Fedora supports arm versions. Thery have aarch64 img. Though idk if this pc is supported or not.

  • @kevinsonkevin3634
    @kevinsonkevin3634 Жыл бұрын

    I'd get more excited about windows on arm for the lower end stuff. Getting a cheap but efficient windows device for simple industrial uses would really open things up for those that provide to enterprise folks that are all-in on windows domain.

  • @JeffGeerling

    @JeffGeerling

    Жыл бұрын

    True; it would be really cool for Microsoft to put out a Surface 'lite' that is basically this box, with maybe 8 GB of RAM and a 64 or 128 GB SSD.

  • @kevinsonkevin3634

    @kevinsonkevin3634

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeffGeerling Haha I was thinking even lower spec! WOR project wet my appetite for digital signage and POS usage where price and power draw win out over performance. I'd definitely want that surface spec too though!

  • @NicoDsSBCs
    @NicoDsSBCs Жыл бұрын

    I hate that your video's look so much better than mine. But I do love to watch them. Cheers.

  • @Baschdl578
    @Baschdl578 Жыл бұрын

    This has me wondering: Are the AMDGPU drivers included in BSD like they are in Linux? And are those USB-C ports Thunderbolt? Would love to see how gaming performance is with an external GPU hooked up to this.

  • @notjustforhackers4252

    @notjustforhackers4252

    Жыл бұрын

    Mesa is supported on BSD " FreeBSD has decent Intel and Radeon graphics capabilities thanks to leveraging the Linux kernel driver code while generally the best GPU support on this BSD still is with NVIDIA thanks to their official binary drivers that tend to "just work" on the OS." : Quote from phoronix.

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