• woelkchen@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    That’s assuming the writer knows what they’re talking about.

    Certainly more than you because Prism emulates an x86 CPU and WINE doesn’t, therefore the WINE comparison is still wrong.

    Edit: Please prove the writer wrong.

    • n2burns
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      7 months ago

      This article seems to conflate “emulation” and “translation layer”. I don’t think there is anything that confirms “Prism emulates an x86 CPU”, only that it allows for running x86 code on ARM. This does not inherently require emulation as demonstrated by Rosetta 2, which is a translation layer.

      • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        only that it allows for running x86 code on ARM. This does not inherently require emulation as demonstrated by Rosetta 2, which is a translation layer.

        WINE doesn’t “translate” one CPU architecture to another CPU architecture either, so the WINE comparison is still wrong, no mater if CPU translation is called emulation by you or not. WINE is a wrapper for API calls within the same CPU architecture. That’s it.

        • n2burns
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          7 months ago

          WINE doesn’t “translate” one CPU architecture to another CPU architecture

          Wrong again.

          • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            “Windows apps are mostly compiled for x86 and they won’t run on ARM with bare Wine”

            What you linked is an effort to combine WINE with the QEMU x86 emulator which is an emulator because it emulates CPU calls. Hint that it’s an emulator is in the name “QEMU” and an actual quote from the wiki page you linked and clearly didn’t care to read: “Running Windows/x86 Applications: See Emulation

            EDIT: Let me also quote from the readme file of the Hangover project:

            Hangover uses various emulators as DLLs (pick one that suits your needs, e.g. works for you) to only emulate the application you want to run instead of emulating a complete Wine installation.