> 333mhz MIPS cpu's are pretty damned fast, usually competing with x86
> CPU's having 2-3x the mhz.

> I don't believe the PSP utilizes the Emotion Engine. I believe that
> the dual core MIPS cpu "takes its place".

Ok those two facts there more than explain what it can do, thats pretty 
impressive 
stuff when do we solder together our very own.
                                                                                
    John


> On Mar 30, 2005 10:01 PM, T. Joseph CARTER <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Thu, Mar 31, 2005 at 01:01:20AM +0000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > CPU 333mhz 4M ram I'm surprised that it can run the caliber of games
> > > that is shown on the demo reel and other footage I have seen. 333mhz is
> > > one thing but  doing graphics with 4M ram,  even with the 166mhz gpu
> > > with 2 more M ram. Maybe it looks different in person
> 
> 333mhz MIPS cpu's are pretty damned fast, usually competing with x86
> CPU's having 2-3x the mhz.
> 
> I believe the PS2 had similar seemingly-starved specs. The internals
> of the Emotion Engine make for an interesting read (see Wikipedia, and
> the EE whitepaper roaming around). It's quite a freaky CPU, even to
> CPU engineers.
> 
> > Yeah, but it has the 333 MHz CPU, the 166 MHz video CPU, and the Emotion
> > Engine.  The Emotion Engine is designed to make not only 3D stuff work
> > well, but also offers things that traditional 3D GPUs don't really.  It's
> > all very cool.
> 
> I don't believe the PSP utilizes the Emotion Engine. I believe that
> the dual core MIPS cpu "takes its place".
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