Linux founder tells Intel to stop inventing 'magic instructions' and 'start fixing real problems'
In article , Brian Gregory
wrote:
I remember - I _think_ it was in the last decade, but it might have been
more - being startled when I spoke to a young computing graduate, to
find he'd never done any assembler. At that time, after my initial
double-take, I thought to myself: the field is big enough, that there'll
be plenty of room for him, and in practice he'll probably never have any
trouble finding interesting and well-paid employment.
there is no need for assembler anymore, except in very rare
circumstances.
On PCs maybe.
on just about everything.
it's *really* difficult for a human to write assembler that's better
than what a modern compiler can produce, plus doing so would take a
*lot* longer.
I bet some embedded stuff for ultra cheap mass market stuff is still
done in assember, or something only very slightly higher level.
you'd lose that bet.
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