" the villain in this story was an ARM chip inside the console -- the very same one, in fact, that led to a few Zunes losing their minds back in 2008."
The Zune problem was caused by a poorly written piece of code in the Zune's clock driver which was subsequently patched in a firmware update; nothing to do with "an ARM chip" or any other chips, where is the correlation? Am I missing something?
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" the villain in this story was an ARM chip inside the console -- the very same one, in fact, that led to a few Zunes losing their minds back in 2008."
The Zune problem was caused by a poorly written piece of code in the Zune's clock driver which was subsequently patched in a firmware update; nothing to do with "an ARM chip" or any other chips, where is the correlation? Am I missing something?