Prpl’s stated goal is to contribute to both Linux and
Android with promises of support for Arch, CentOS, Chromium OS, Debian,
Fedora, Gentoo, MEOS (MIPS Embedded OS), Montavista, Redhat, Tizen, Ubuntu,
and WebOS (really?), with an open-source “code bank” for a additional
resources. The goal is to build a community around MIPS to help offset
the tremendous popularity of ARM devices, as well as to create an
Internet of Things infrastructure focused on datacenter-to-datacenter
applications, software portability, and virtualized architecture.
That’s a neat capability on paper, but whether anyone will
opt for it in practice is an entirely different question. MIPS has been
successful in embedded hardware, but it’s had very little luck pushing
out of the embedded space and challenging ARM in smartphones or
higher-end devices. The odd exception to this is that MIPS retains some
high-profile design wins in the Chinese market — Ingenic Semiconductor,
one of the Prpl partners, has developed a MIPS-based architecture, China’s Loongson CPU is MIPS-derived, and multiple supercomputers have used the architecture.
The odds of MIPS winning broad hardware support from the
wide market seem limited. Not only has ARM secured itself a dominant
position in many of the markets Imagination Technologies would like to
enter, IBM and Nvidia have made waves already this year with the OpenPower initiative. It’s hard to see MIPS making much room for itself in that ultra-crowded market. Still, support from Qualcomm and Imagination Technologies’ strong GPU business could improve the core’s usefulness for embedded applications.
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