I agree that MIPS - and it's descendants such as MIPS-X, DLX, Loongson (which is less a descendant than a flat-out knockoff), and OpenRISC - are among the cleanest and simplest high-performance architectures around (most of those which are simpler are either PICs, or older 8-bit designs such as the PDP-8 or the MOS6502), and I love them to death. However, they don't have more than a fraction of the installed hardware base of x86 or ARM, even taken together and including all the various embedded systems based on them. This may change as more Loongson-based laptop and mobile systems get built, but it is unlikely that those will be sold outside of the People's Republic of China in significant numbers.alexfru wrote:MIPS is good. Not because I work for the company, but because it's a well-known arch, it's rather regular and if you want a board with it to play, there are many options. There are inexpensive boards capable of running RetroBSD, OpenWRT, Linux, Android.obfusc8or wrote: So, what do you think: which would be the best way to go for now?
While there are a handful of SoC and makerboard kits for MIPS, there aren't narly as many as for ARM, and AFAIK no stock form factor motherboards at all (apparently, there used to be an eval board called Jaguar ATX, but the company that made them seems to be out of business). Perhaps what is needed is a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for the development of an ATX or ITX form-factor MIPS desktop motherboard? It would have to focus on Linux or maybe one of the BSDs as it's primary OS, and it would be a niche market item at best, but there are quite probably enough devs and engineers who would be interested in it to at least do something. Given that Imagination Technologies (who bought out MIPS Technologies in 2013) seem to be looking for something like that, it might even have a real product someday