I have two $99 10" tablets with 720p displays and 4GB RAM. One is quad-core ARM+Linux (well, rooted Android), the other is dual-core x86+Win10. Both are 32-bit only, and both run Chrome.
The ARM tablet is noticeably faster when web browsing. The only thing the x86 does better is video playback, but only by a tiny bit. I don't play games, so I haven't tested that.
I believe the only reason the x86 tablet even exists is to run Win10: It was purely a software decision, a marketing decision, not an engineering decision. If full Win10 ran on ARM, the x86 tablet wouldn't exist (but there would be two ARM tablets, one running Linux/Android, and one running Win10).
The goal in personal systems is to get the most computing done per watt. Fewer watts means I can reduce or eliminate heatsinks, simplify power supplies, reduce size, reduce cost, and the list goes on. It ripples through to more bang for the buck for the entire system. ARM not only delivers more computing per watt, it also delivers more computing per dollar.
In the near future I believe Intel will only rule when installed in large boxes (high-end desktops, server racks) where only the large scale will let them prevail on the basis of compute power per watt. Everything with a battery will soon be all ARM.
Why? Early next year MS will have an ARM Win10 Mobile release with x86 emulation. Assuming that goes well, I would not be at all surprised to see a full desktop Win10 release for Aarch64. With much of .NET officially supported on x86 Linux, and with .NET Core already on ARM, I believe a full ARM build of .NET is simply waiting for release. The path exists and is being traveled.
Personal use of x86 will die as MS support for ARM grows. When x86 is no longer the exclusive Win10 desktop target, Intel will have no hardware leg to stand on in the commodity personal space. All that will be left for Intel will be the high-end desktop space and the cloud.
To hell with you, Torvalds. What you should worry about is losing Linux installations when full Win10 comes to ARM!