ARM has introduced its first 64-bit microprocessor architecture, ARMv8, which should enable wider use of ARM chips in servers and other enterprise equipment and turn up the competitive heat on Intel.
ARM tells CNET that the shift to 64-bit devices is taking place faster than expected. Part of the reason is that even 32-bit code runs faster on ARM's newest 64-bit chips. Brooke Crothers writes about ...
Although ARM reported a drop in royalty payments for its embedded chip designs, the company reported an increase in licensing revenues and a healthy boost in the chips it sells into smartphones, ...
Early prototype 64-bit ARM servers could be available for testing purposes by the end of this year or possibly at the latest by the middle of next year, ARM said on Monday. ARM will try to make ...
Speaking at an Arm DevSummit keynote, Paul Williamson, VP and GM of Client Business at Arm, announced that future Arm Cortex-A CPU cores — such as those powering future smartphones — will become ...
LONDON – Processor intellectual property licensor ARM Holdings plc is expected to reveal its plans for processor cores that support 64-bit computing, within the next few weeks, according to an IDG ...
ARM is working with Microsoft to tune the Windows OS to work on processors based on ARM’s 64-bit architecture, an ARM official said this week. Ian Forsyth, program manager at ARM, could not comment on ...
ARM has announced its new 64-bit Cortex-A50 processor series, comprising the Cortex-A57 targeting high-performance applications and Cortex-A53 – ARM's most power-efficient application processor and ...
Brooke Crothers writes about mobile computer systems, including laptops, tablets, smartphones: how they define the computing experience and the hardware that makes them tick. He has served as an ...
It was December 2016 when Microsoft and Qualcomm first announced their ambitious plan to introduce Windows 10 PCs that can run x86 apps on a Snapdragon processor. Now, the PCs are here, and users are ...
UK microprocessor maker ARM is to use technologies usually found in servers to power a new generation of broadband wireless devices using third-generation (3G) mobile networks. The Cambridge-based ...
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