• Rosetta will remain available as a general-purpose tool through macOS 27 to help developers migrate their Intel apps, with limited gaming-focused functionality continuing beyond that timeframe
• Intel-based Macs will continue receiving security updates for 3 years following macOS Tahoe
• After the general Rosetta support ends, Apple will maintain a subset of Rosetta functionality specifically for older unmaintained gaming titles that depend on Intel-based frameworks
Even in a car, being able to control the windscreen wipers, radio, ask how much fuel is left are all tasks it would be useful to do conversationally.
There are some apps (im thinking of jira as an example) where i'd like to do 90% of the usage conversationally.
are you REALLY sure you want that?
how much fuel there is is a quick glance into the dash, and you can control precisely the radio volume without even looking.
'turn up the volume', 'turn down the volume a little bit', 'a bit more',...
and then a radio ad going 'get yourself a 3 pack of the new magic wipers...' and car wipers going off.
id hate conversational ui on my car.
A solution could be to put another layer on top of the internet. This could be done by means of a "presentation proxy", similar to cloud gaming, e.g. based on VNC, where only a VNC client is run on the old computer, and the browser is running on the presentation proxy.
Not that I disbelieve, I just wasn't especially picking that up from the article.
intel has no competition to amd in the gaming segment right now. they control both the low energy efficiency market and the high performance one.