What? You mean like the Elbrus that introduced superscalar architecture almost a decade before Intel (which Intel probably just bought for cheap after the collapse) and one of whose chief designers then lead the Intel team that developed the Pentium III processor? The Elbrus which in its second iteration performed on par with its contemporary Cray supercomputer competitor while running at one fifth the clock frequency and that in its third iteration outperformed its contemporary Cray supercomputer competitor by a factor of 2, that semiconductor industry?
What? You mean like the Elbrus that introduced superscalar architecture almost a decade before Intel (which Intel probably just bought for cheap after the collapse) and one of whose chief designers then lead the Intel team that developed the Pentium III processor? The Elbrus which in its second iteration performed on par with its contemporary Cray supercomputer competitor while running at one fifth the clock frequency and that in its third iteration outperformed its contemporary Cray supercomputer competitor by a factor of 2, that semiconductor industry?