diff --git a/documentation/faq.sgml b/documentation/faq.sgml
index e66bc1a3b1e..539a783a865 100644
--- a/documentation/faq.sgml
+++ b/documentation/faq.sgml
@@ -129,6 +129,58 @@
+
+
+ When will Wine integrate an x86 CPU emulator so we can
+ run Windows applications on non-x86 machines?
+
+
+
+ The short answer is 'probably never'. Remember, Wine Is Not a
+ (CPU) Emulator. The long answer is that we probably don't want or
+ need to integrate one in the traditional sense.
+
+
+ Integrating a CPU emulator in Wine would be extremely hard,
+ due to the large number of Windows APIs and the complex
+ datatypes they exchange. It is not uncommon for a Windows API to
+ take three or more pointers to structures composed of many fields,
+ including pointers to other complex structures. For each of these
+ we would need a conversion routine to deal with the byte order and
+ alignment issues. Furthermore, Windows also contains many callback
+ mechanisms that constitute as many extra places where we would have
+ to handle these conversion issues. Wine already has to deal with
+ 16 vs. 32 bit APIs and Ansi vs. Unicode APIs which both
+ introduce significant complexity. Adding support for a CPU emulator
+ inside Wine would introduce at least double that complexity and
+ only serve to slow down the development of Wine.
+
+
+ Fortunately another solution exists to run Windows applications
+ on non-x86 platforms: run both Wine and the application inside the
+ CPU emulator. As long as the emulator provides a standard Unix
+ environment, Wine should only need minimal modifications. What
+ performance you loose due to Wine running inside the emulator
+ rather than natively, you gain in complexity inside of Wine.
+ Furthermore, if the emulator is fast enough to run Windows
+ applications, Photoshop for instance, then it should be fast enough
+ to run that same Windows application plus Wine.
+
+
+ Two projects have started along those lines: QEMU>, an
+ open-source project, and Dynamite>,
+ a commercial CPU emulator environment from
+ Transitives Technologies>
+ which has been paired
+ with Wine>.
+
+
+
+
+
Why would anyone want Wine? Doesn't Windows suck?