ARM beats revenue forecasts, swims in piles of gold coins

ARM beats revenue forecasts, swims in piles of gold coins

Mobile chip wunder-company and recent Microsoft BFF ARM Holdings has released its financial results for the second quarter, and the news is good. Real good. Revenues are up about 50 percent compared to the same period a year before and profits jumped a whopping 167 percent. ARM indicates its strong presence in the mobile market is the primary reason for this growth, citing an average of 2.6 ARM-based chips in every cellphone. New licensing deals, like the one with Microsoft, also buoyed that result. What’s next for the company? 2.6 ARM-based chips in every baby, puppy, and kitty.

ARM beats revenue forecasts, swims in piles of gold coins originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Jul 2010 07:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MeeGo becomes infotainment operating system of choice for BMW, GM, Hyundai and more

It’s getting to the point where it’s not terribly easy to keep track of all the in-car entertainment initiatives our wondrous connected future has in store, but here’s two names you’ll want to remember: GENIVI and MeeGo. The former is an industry alliance that now includes automakers GM, BMW, Hyundai and Peugeot Citroen alongside the likes of ARM, NVIDIA, Nokia and Intel, and MeeGo is the Linux-based OS that they’ve just decided will soon be powering our cars. Don’t expect this to affect your daily drive anytime soon, but in the long run we wouldn’t be surprised to hear that the Moblin-Maemo base underpins future revisions of Terminal Mode and OnStar.

MeeGo becomes infotainment operating system of choice for BMW, GM, Hyundai and more originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Jul 2010 05:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft becomes official ARM licensee, could an MS microprocessor be next?

Microsoft becomes official ARM licensee for greater glory in the mobile spaceARM processors are so hot right now, especially in the mobile space, where they power many of the greatest smartphones, tablets, and mobile devices coming down the turnpike. Microsoft is apparently looking to merge in on that action, becoming an official ARM licensee. It’s unclear exactly what MS will be doing with its new found technical rights, but General Manager KD Hallman said “With closer access to the ARM technology we will be able to enhance our research and development activities for ARM-based products.” This likely means Microsoft will be better optimizing Windows Embedded and Windows Phone for the processor architecture, but also opens the door for Ballmer & Co. to create their own magical microprocessor and, ultimately, use it to rule the world with an iron fist. Terms of the agreement were not given, but hopefully nobody in Redmond had to lose any appendages to seal the deal.

Continue reading Microsoft becomes official ARM licensee, could an MS microprocessor be next?

Microsoft becomes official ARM licensee, could an MS microprocessor be next? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Jul 2010 06:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ARM and TSMC team up for tinier 20nm Cortex SOCs

It’s no secret that ARM ideas are powering much of the mobile revolution these days, but the company doesn’t print its own systems-on-a-chip, that duty gets outsourced to silicon foundries — like TSMC, who just got all buddy-buddy with the firm to transition future smartphone chips to the 28nm and obscenely tiny 20nm high-k metal gate processes. (We’re not sure what this means for GlobalFoundries, who had a similar deal earlier this year.) As per usual with a die size reduction, ARM chips will see higher speed and have decreased power consumption, but since 20nm is (relatively) unexplored territory it could be years before chips hit the market. PR after the break, or hit the more coverage link for further explanation by an ARM VP of Marketing.

Continue reading ARM and TSMC team up for tinier 20nm Cortex SOCs

ARM and TSMC team up for tinier 20nm Cortex SOCs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Jul 2010 05:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Roverpad comes clean with five new tablet PCs, one running Tegra

And here you were thinking this whole “tablet revolution” thing was a myth, huh? Out of seemingly nowhere, Russia’s own Rover Computer has just issued not one, not two, but five new tablet PCs for its nine time zones, with one of ’em boasting Windows CE 6.0 and the others running on Google’s Android system. Kicking things off is the Air G70, which will boast a 7-inch resistive touchscreen, a 667MHz ARM11 CPU, 256MB of RAM, a 4GB internal flash drive, WiFi, optional 3G and a microSD expansion slot. Next up is the Go G50, Android-powered 5-inch slate that relies on a Marvell PXA303, 128MB of RAM, 2GB of storage as well as 3G, WiFi, a microSD slot and a USB socket. Going even smaller is the aptly-named Air G70, which checks in with a 4-inch display (800 x 480 resolution, though), support for a multitude of file formats and compatibility with navigation software. The Go G72 steps it back up to a 7-inch panel, but also throws in a webcam, Bluetooth, GPS chip and a hint of color around the edges. Finally, the 7-inch TegA W70 will hum along with NVIDIA’s Tegra within, and being the flagship that it is, it’ll also include HDMI, 4GB of flash storage, 3G, a webcam, 512MB of RAM, a capacitive touchscreen and Android 2.1. Pricing details have yet to be hammered out across the line, but we’re told to expect the family on store shelves by October.

Update: We’ve received credible information that Rover may not actually survive as a company long enough to release these. Word has it that the general manager just bolted, and the vast majority of the marketing team was let go. In their words, the company is “practically bankrupt now,” and it’s unlikely the firm will find the funds to brand these otherwise vanilla ODM designs as its own.

Roverpad comes clean with five new tablet PCs, one running Tegra originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Jul 2010 05:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo’s Skylight and U1 Hybrid being revived with fresh Qualcomm silicon?

What’s this? A new sliver of hope in a dark, lost world? Before you throw your hands up and shut your eyes, you should know that all of this is coming from Digitimes, so taking it all in with an unhealthy dose of salt is highly suggested. According to them, Lenovo is actually planning to eventually ship its Skylight and IdeaPad U1 Hybrid (yeah, the two machines that were kinda-sorta shelved a month ago), but with far different specifications. For starters, they’ll rely on Qualcomm’s recently announced dual-core processor line, and rather than using the now-nonexistent Skylight OS, they’ll both rely on Google’s Android. If all goes well, the official launch will occur before the dawn of 2011, but there’s no solid word on when they’ll actually ship. In related news, there’s also word that Toshiba will be readying a smartbook in its long-standing Dynabook line, with NVIDIA’s Tegra 250 under the hood, a 10.1-inch panel and Android running the show. Now, who’s up for seeing if any of this actually comes to fruition?

Lenovo’s Skylight and U1 Hybrid being revived with fresh Qualcomm silicon? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Jun 2010 03:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Texas Instruments’ Blaze tablet coming to developers this August

Back in February when Texas Instruments announced its ARM-based OMAP 4 system-on-chip ‘Blaze’ dev platform, we sort of figured it might be tablet-bound. And, here it is — Blaze is going to be a tablet! Not a shocker, but we’re glad to hear it, of course, since the tablet wars are hotter than ever and we love a good fight. So, what do we know about TI’s entry in the game? Hardware wise it’s going to be a 10.4-inch XVGA touchscreen LCD with two USB ports. Internally, we hear it’ll boast a 1GHz OMAP4430 cpu, 1GB of DDR2 RAM, WLAN, Bluetooth, GPS, and FM, plus external camera and pico projector modules. The tablet is not set for retail release, but for developers, but we’re still pretty excited to see this one come out to play.

Texas Instruments’ Blaze tablet coming to developers this August originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Jun 2010 15:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Liquavista displays go out in the sun, look better than all right (video)

Liquavista displays go out in the sun, look better than all right

We’ve seen Liquavista displays plenty of times at various trade shows, but so far they’ve always been locked up indoors. Now they’ve gone outside to enjoy the weather, and ARMdevices.net was there to capture the results. The low-power color and monochrome screens are shown looking at least as good in the wild as they do in captivity, and when placed next to a traditional LCD (in the laptop on the right) the difference is clear. Granted, the colors are a bit washed out, but the refresh rate is certainly far higher than anything we’ve seen from E Ink. While there’s still no firm word on how much this technology will cost manufacturers, converting from standard LCD production to Liquavista production is said to be relatively painless. How painless? We’ll rather disappointingly have to wait for at least another year before we find out, as these aren’t slated to go into production until the second half of 2011.

Continue reading Liquavista displays go out in the sun, look better than all right (video)

Liquavista displays go out in the sun, look better than all right (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Jun 2010 09:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo IdeaPad smartbook appears, powered by Freescale and Pegatron

When Lenovo decided to shelve the Skylight smartbook, there were many tears here at Engadget HQ, but it seems the company’s ambitions continue in the smartphone-turned-netbook realm. Notebook Italia reports that a new Lenovo IdeaPad has surfaced at the Freescale Technology Forum this week, powered by a Freescale i.MX515 SoC with an 800MHz ARM Cortex A8 processor, smartphone-esque battery life, and a power management system reportedly robust enough that it doesn’t even need to be cooled. If all this sounds rather familiar, it might be because you’ve seen it before — it appears Lenovo simply tweaked the low-power Pegatron reference design that we wrote about early last year. Not that we’re complaining or anything.

Lenovo IdeaPad smartbook appears, powered by Freescale and Pegatron originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Jun 2010 11:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel’s Chief Wizard Conjures the Cloud, Apple and a Phone That Keep Secrets [Interview]

If anybody knows the future of computing, it might be Intel CTO and Labs chief Justin Rattner. So we had to ask him, “What’s next?” Well, for one, Intel Inside your phone. More »