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3:14 AM
@Mgetz Depends on how much you think it is, of course. But you should be thinking at least three fourths of a typical chip...
 
3:31 AM
On the other hand, on something like an Arduino, the percentage is just a tad smaller.
 
4:02 AM
Control Data sold computers to the Soviet Union in exchange for Soviet Christmas cards; however, Control Data found it difficult to sell religious Christmas cards marked "Made in the U.S.S.R." to consumers in the United States."7 The transaction resulted in a loss for Control Data.
Its a really interesting judgment call

Thought:
If you didn't spend the die space on cache you'd just over heat

The real problem with cache is that it increases latency and makes stuff that you deterministically scheduled slower.
 
5:00 AM
@Mikhail depends on the cache, there is a lot of stuff effectively crammed into L1 which is nearly chip speed
 
 
2 hours later…
7:28 AM
@Mgetz basically you can make a chip that is much faster if you don't have a cache
and that chip will have 300 megabytes of memory
but it will also be blazing fast
in register computing
like you can access data stored in this way in like 3 clock cycles, maybe even better if you have stuff pipelined
on the same subject: qr.ae/pKEIDm
 
 
14 hours later…
9:40 PM
@Mgetz Depends on memory usage, of course. If your access patterns fit reasonably closely with what caches are designed for (reasonably high locality of reference) they help a lot, with minimal impact on how you write code. But yes, when the cache misses, it's slower than if you didn't have cache at all. Takes at least a little to figure out something wasn't in cache.
 
 
1 hour later…
11:04 PM
@Mgetz finding these things out sometimes is extremely difficult due to the lack of openness. For instance replacement of data in cache is said to be random, not pseudo random (based on the datasheet). But we all know true randomness on a CPU does not exist. So the 1M dollar question is what generates this randomness and how can you influence it
 

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