Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Will Windows8 Use ARM?

The ARM is a 32-bit processor that uses a reduced instruction set computer (RISC) architecture. The manufacturer and developer is by ARM Holdings. The ARM architecture is a widely used 32-bit ISA based on the numbers produced. Because the ARM processors are relatively simple, this has made them suitable for low power applications. In that regard, this has made them dominant player in the mobile and embedded electronics market. They have a relatively low cost, and low energy consumers.
ARM Microprocessor1 400x148 Will Windows8 Use ARM?
There are about one billion mobile phones around the world and about 98 percent sold each year use at least one ARM processor. Since 2009, ARM processors have accounted for almost 90% of all embedded 32-bit RISC processors. ARM processors are low power chipsets so they appear in a variety of consumer electronics. These include PDAs, digital media, mobile phones, and music players, calculators , hand-held game consoles, and computer peripherals such as hard drives and routers.
Now it appears that Microsoft may be looking a ARM and Windows8 to see if there could be a union. Presumably, Microsoft could use the combination to offer new low power products ranging from consumer tablets for Office aficionados to Internet café systems in remote third, world countries.
Cortex block diagram1 Will Windows8 Use ARM?
The Basics are there
Microsoft has been working with ARM for several years now, with the Windows CE platform using ARM for years now, so it has intimate knowledge of the hardware.
According to a news release from ARM, “As the latest addition to ARM’s Cortex-A family of processors, the Cortex-A15 MPCore processor will enable a new and vast array of products ranging from next-generation smartphones, tablets, large-screen mobile computing and high-end digital home entertainment devices through to wireless base stations and enterprise infrastructure products.“
Recently, Microsoft licensed the ARM core. Microsoft may be poised to get intimate knowledge of what a 64-bit ARM implementation would be like for Windows 8.
Source: EETimes
Slashgear

No comments:

Post a Comment