@samsonjas
Hmm, this simply isn't true any more. RISC vs CISC is long dead and irrelevant, the chip team that Apple acquhired have made something seemingly far away from an ARM reference design and the latest and greatest chips, from Fujitsu's world-fastest supercomputers to Apple's M1 are fastest in class.
"In class" being the key thing to remember.
And as I said, it all depends on what you are trying to do. If you are doing tasks with programs that have been streamlined to work with an ARM processor, it is going to be a lot faster than a conventional processor. That is why for example your phone can handle a web page or video site as fast or faster than your home computer.
But do not confuse that with raw processor power. And the entire CISC-RISC argument is like a decade obsolete. Once we transitioned to multi core 64 bit processors, the differences between the two became less and less important. Not like it was when we were playing with 1GHz and slower 32 bit processors.
But if you think they are the best, then let's have a race. Compile a 60 minute 1080P video with stereo sound on an M1, and I will use my AMD. Let' see which one is done first. Or do a 3D rendering of multiple layers of a CAD file into a composite image.
Or as I said, games. If you are playing "mobile games", that is a great system to use. But if you are playing ones that require more raw processor power like an FPS, then it is quickly going to get bogged down. One recent review series I looked at compared the M1 to a slew of common games. The only one it shined at was Minecraft. The latest Tombraider, it was achieving a frame rate of around 16, less than a third of the previous generation systems could achieve.
Myself, I am not a gamer, but it does show the difference between raw power, and power with streamlined code. Myself, I am more likely to be doing video or sound editing, applications where just pure raw power is most important.
And since I have been using the Adobe suite for 2 decades, I am not about to dump those for a "streamlined" program made by somebody else for the M1. Of course, I for the same reason am not dumping my desktop for a laptop. Once again, does not matter how powerful the laptop CPU is, it will still never compete with that of a desktop. Same with GPU performance.
AM not being anti here at all, but neither am I being a fanboi. Just comparing apples to apples, and not apples to oranges.