ARM promises dual-core Cortex A9-based smartphones next year

The world’s two most visually engaging smartphones — the iPhone and the Pre — share very similar cores based on ARM’s Cortex A8 architecture, and with the newer, more advanced Cortex A9 in the pipeline, you can’t help but let your mind wander a bit as you envision what twice as much computational power could bring to a handset. The A9 employs more advanced instruction pipelining than its predecessor, but the biggest news has to be the fact that it can pack two or more cores — and ARM fully expects dual-core A9-based phones to hit in 2010. Of course, power consumption is the biggest constraint when it comes to this category of device, and while the company says that peak drain will exceed that on today’s crop of devices, average consumption will actually drop thanks largely to a move from 65nm to 45nm manufacturing processes. Add in 1080p video promised by TI’s next-gen OMAP4 silicon wrapped around an A9 core, and you’ve basically got a home theater in your pocket that’s ready to rock for a few hours on a charge. That and Snoop Dogg, of course.

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ARM promises dual-core Cortex A9-based smartphones next year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Jun 2009 05:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gartner: Android on ARM “more snappy” than Windows 7 on Atom

The case for running Android — an OS developed for smartphones — on cheap, ultra-portable laptops has yet to be made. However, that hasn’t stopped manufacturers from tinkering with the idea as demonstrated by the broad range of Android “smartbooks” running on ARM-based (be it Snapdragon, Tegra, or Freescale) architectures at Computex. Now Gartner, the guiding force for many corporate CIOs, has issued a research note that puts Atom-based netbooks running Windows 7 on notice while giving credence to the emerging smartbook category of ultra-portables. Analysts Christian Heidarson and Ben Lee said the following in Gartner’s Semiconductor DQ Monday Report:

When Android did work, we found that the user interface was very snappy on relatively low-performance ARM processors, more so than Windows 7 on Atom.

Of course, Windows 7 scales much better than Vista and as a full-blown desktop OS gives users a lot of flexibility as long as the netbook’s chipset is up to the task. Then again, if you’re looking for a purpose-built, fanless 10-inch ultra-portable with integrated WWAN data and FireFox browser that costs less than $200 and plays 25 days of music or 10-hours of 1080p video off a single charge, well then a smartbook might be the device for you. We’ll see which carrier is brave enough to sell ’em come October.

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Gartner: Android on ARM “more snappy” than Windows 7 on Atom originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Jun 2009 07:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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JMicron NAND flash controller could lead to significantly lower SSD prices

Truth be told, SSD prices have been declining at a noticeable tick since way back in 2007, but the reality is that the average consumer still can’t afford one — or, at least they aren’t willing to pay the lofty premium for the decent increase in speed. If a bold claim from JMicron is to be believed, all that could change in the run-up to CES 2010. A new report has it that the aforesaid company will be demonstrating its new NAND flash controller next week at Computex, with the JMF612 aimed specifically at a “new generation of NAND flash chips built using smaller process geometries that will be entering the market soon.” If all goes well, the cheap single-chip controller could lead to SSD prices falling by around 50 percent by Christmas, but after years of waiting for these things to really get priced for Joe Sixpack and his gaggle of siblings, we’re still cautiously skeptical. Not that we wouldn’t love to be proven wrong or anything.

[Image courtesy of HotHardware]

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JMicron NAND flash controller could lead to significantly lower SSD prices originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 31 May 2009 08:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Job Listing Hints at More Powerful Processor in Future iPhones

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A recent Apple job listing sheds light on possible hardware that will deliver a significant performance boost for upcoming iPhone models.

Apple is hiring a low-level iPhone programmer who is familiar with the ARM mobile-processor architecture and NEON vector processing. NEON refers to the vector unit in ARMv7 Cortex processors — an improvement from the current iPhone’s ARMv6-based processors.

According to ARM, ARMv7 Cortex processors will deliver a significant performance boost to accelerate 3D gaming, speech processing, audio decoding, image processing, telephony and sound synthesis.

Because the programmer position is unfilled, it’s unclear whether this processor will appear in Apple’s next iPhone, which many are predicting will be announced at June’s Worldwide Developer Conference. Apple has made no official announcements about a third-generation iPhone.

Job Listing [Apple via MacRumors]

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Photo: Brandon Shigeta/Flickr


ARM CEO hints at possible Windows 7 support for ARM processors

This could just be a case of a CEO letting his wishful thinking out into the open, but ARM’s Warren East was apparently all too happy to talk about the possibility of Windows 7 supporting ARM processors during a recent analysts conference call, even if he wasn’t quite ready to offer much of anything in the way of specifics. He did lay out the scenario pretty well, however, leading off by saying that “Microsoft will continue to play an important part in this [netbook] space,” and that “if there was Windows support for the ARM processor today clearly it would be a very different marketplace.” To which he apparently quickly added, “perhaps there will be support in future but that’s really for Microsoft to comment on and not for us to comment on, I’m afraid.” Of course, all of this is made all the more interesting given ARM’s increasing interest in the netbook space, which is certainly a tough nut to crack without Microsoft’s assistance — Android possibilities notwithstanding.

[Via Electronista]

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ARM CEO hints at possible Windows 7 support for ARM processors originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 May 2009 20:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Assembles Chip Design Team, Plans Custom iPhone Guts

The WSJ reports that Apple is putting together an all-star chip design team, starting with the former CTO of AMD, to work on in-house units for mobile devices. Old habits die hard.

Apple is prone to occasional fits of vertical integration, and has never been terribly reluctant to run counter to the prevailing hardware winds, but this doesn’t sound like some Jobsian act of contrarianism. The report indicates that it’s the iPhone’s unique power and performance demands that are driving this move, at least ostensibly:

Apple could use the internally developed chips to sharply reduce the power consumption of its hit iPhone and iPod touch devices, and possibly add graphics circuitry to help its hardware play realistic game software and high-definition videos, people familiar with its plans say.

Apple already works with Samsung, the manufacturer of the ARM-based processors used in the iPhone and iPod Touch, to design chips suited to their specific needs, and Apple is a large enough company that it doesn’t have trouble coaxing tailor-made hardware out of its suppliers. But totally in-house chip design boasts the huge advantage of secrecy; removing Samsung from the equation ensures that any power-saving, graphics-boosting chip features Apple manages to conjure for their next iWhatever don’t eventually find their way into units available to other industry giants like HTC or RIM.

So don’t confuse Apple’s latest move with an effort to spur innovation—from here, this looks like technology-hoarding, pure and simple; a bid to further insulate their mobile devices from competition by locking down their hardware as hard as they do their software. [WSJ]

Skytone’s Android-powered netbook to cost around $250

Guangzhou Skytone Transmission Technologies Company, which we will absolutely never call by its full name again, has just dropped a juicy nugget about its forthcoming netbook. If you’ll recall, we recently caught wind of the ARM-based, Android-powered rig (the Alpha 680), which is expected to be a stripped down portable useful for web surfing and light duty Office use. Nixon Wu, Skytone’s co-founder, recently confessed that it’s aiming to sell the machine for around $250, and if all goes well, it should have prototypes ready by June and final products ready for consumption a month or two after that. Call us crazy (or just greedy, really), but we were totally hoping for this to ring up at $199 or less.

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Skytone’s Android-powered netbook to cost around $250 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 26 Apr 2009 02:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Skytone debuts ARM-based, Android-powered netbook / tablet

Well, after months of nothing but hacks and proof of concepts, we now have not one but two Android-powered netbooks — neither of which are actually available just yet, of course. This latest one comes from Chinese firm Skytone and, unlike the I-Buddie, boasts a slightly more unique convertible tablet design, which the company was apparently able to make happen by cutting corners in every other area. That includes a slightly underwhelming 533MHz ARM processor, a 7-inch 800 x 480 touchscreen, a mere 128MB of RAM, 1GB of storage, an SD card slot for expansion, and even optional 3G (although that could just be a dongle). What’s more, it looks like Skytone is saying that the netbook, dubbed the Alpha-680, could sell for as little as $100 if and when it’s actually released — which, as far as we can tell, could happen next week or never.

[Via The Inquirer]

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Skytone debuts ARM-based, Android-powered netbook / tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Apr 2009 15:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LitPhone projector phone, new pocket PJs surface in Hong Kong

Outside of Samsung’s W7900 Show and a few nondescript prototypes, the projector phone sector has been largely stagnant. Thankfully, it seems at least one no-name company is looking to make a name for itself by developing yet another entrant. The LitPhone, designed and showcased by China’s own SCT Optronics, is a GSM handset that sports CMMB TV tuning, a touchscreen and a built-in projector with an undisclosed native resolution. Furthermore, the company also demonstrated its USB-powered PCLit mobile projector at the Hong Kong Electronics Fair, which debuted alongside Join Technology’s JP77 and WE3 Technology’s WE8626. Have a glance at the whole bundle down in the read link — just don’t get those hopes too high about a US release date anytime soon.

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LitPhone projector phone, new pocket PJs surface in Hong Kong originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Apr 2009 17:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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$22 iPod Shuffle shocker: components tiny, inexpensive

When iSuppli recently reported that the parts and packaging of the iPod Shuffle 3G cost only $21.77, a mere twenty-eight percent of the unit’s retail price, PMP Today asked a most reasonable question: Where are the new Shuffle KIRFs? According to Business Week, Samsung is making a killing on these things, supplying not only the unit’s ARM-based processor ($5.98), but the storage ($6) on at least a few of the units as well. The lithium ion battery, described by iSuppli as “the smallest we’ve ever seen,” has an asking price of $1.20. As for things like capacitors and resistors, they’re being described as “about the size of a grain of salt” and cost fractions of a penny each. Of course, none of this takes into account things like paying engineers and designers, and royalties paid to patents owned by other companies. Not that the KIRFsters of Shenzhen worry about these sorts of things. Maybe the wherewithal required to produce a phony Shuffle is (for the time being) beyond the capabilities of the pirates? Or maybe they’re just having too much fun cranking out NOKLAs.

Read – iPod Shuffle 3G Costs $22 to Make: Where are the Clones?
Read – Deconstructing Apple’s Tiny iPod Shuffle

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$22 iPod Shuffle shocker: components tiny, inexpensive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Apr 2009 10:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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