ARM unveils new processor for mid-range mobile devices

Published June 3, 2013
ARM's Chief Marketing Officer and EVP of Business Development Ian Drew displays the Nike+ FuelBand, which contains STM32 ARM Cortex-M3 chips, during a Reuters interview before the opening of the Computex exhibition in Taipei June 3, 2013. The FuelBand can track one's physical activity, steps taken daily and the amount of calories burned. — Reuters Photo
ARM's Chief Marketing Officer and EVP of Business Development Ian Drew displays the Nike+ FuelBand, which contains STM32 ARM Cortex-M3 chips, during a Reuters interview before the opening of the Computex exhibition in Taipei June 3, 2013. The FuelBand can track one's physical activity, steps taken daily and the amount of calories burned. — Reuters Photo

TAIPEI - British chip designer ARM Holdings said it will defend its over 90 percent share of the mid-range mobile device market against hard-running rival Intel Corp, helped by a new processor it unveiled on Monday.

ARM introduced the new Cortex A-12 processor optimized for smartphones that sell for between $200 and $350, a mid-range category that the Cambridge-based company said would number half a billion devices a year by 2015.

ARM also expects to see its chip architecture in more wearable devices in the future, such as smart watches which it said could be publicly available this year.

"Wearable and interneted devices are starting to come into the industry," ARM marketing executive vice president Ian Drew told Reuters in an interview ahead of the Computex show fair in Taipei.

"I was riding a bike with a motion detector, and we've demonstrated a fork that has ARM control in it to count calorie consumption ... I suspect sometime this year you'll see one or two (manufacturers) demonstrate smart watches."

US rival Intel, the world's largest chip maker, last month unveiled the most extensive overhaul to date of its Atom mobile processors that underpin its push into smartphones and tablets. Its chips now power a number of devices in the mid-market segment that ARM is targeting with its new processor.

"They are a very big competitor and they're a big competitor to our partners. We have a different business model - we license IP," Drew said.

"But we're not slowing down. We focus on how we differentiate the industry ... which is why we launched Cortex A-12 and all the graphics and video products around that."

ARM said the new processor would deliver 40 percent more performance than its predecessor, the Cortex A-9, using a similar amount of energy. It expects devices using Cortex A-12s to be on the market by mid-2014.

Chips based on ARM technology dominate mobile computing, from tablets like Apple Inc's iPad to high-end smartphones from Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, and down to feature phones and entry-level devices. It licenses its designs to chipmakers like Qualcomm Inc and Samsung, and in return receives a royalty on every chip shipped.

ARM beat first-quarter profit forecasts, driven by buoyant demand for smartphones and tablets that use its processor technology and the strength of the dollar.

Opinion

A big transition

A big transition

Despite ongoing debates about their success rates, deradicalisation initiatives have led to the ideological transformation of several militants.

Editorial

Stocktaking
Updated 29 Dec, 2024

Stocktaking

All institutions must speak in unison against illegal activities in the country.
Ceasefire mirage
29 Dec, 2024

Ceasefire mirage

THERE was renewed hope that Israel would cease its slaughter for the time being in Gaza as Tel Aviv’s negotiators...
Olympic chapter polls
29 Dec, 2024

Olympic chapter polls

A TRUCE has been reached, ensuring Monday’s elections of the Pakistan Olympic Association will be acceptable to ...
Mixed signals
Updated 28 Dec, 2024

Mixed signals

If Imran wants talks to yield results, he should authorise PTI’s committee to fully engage with the other side without setting deadlines.
Opaque trials
Updated 28 Dec, 2024

Opaque trials

Secretive trials, shielded from scrutiny, fail to provide the answers that citizens deserve.
A friendly neighbour
28 Dec, 2024

A friendly neighbour

FORMER Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh who passed away on Thursday at 92 was a renowned economist who pulled ...