Intel is taking on arch rival ARM today with the launch of new Intel Atom chips for tablet computers. The Atom is a low-power version of Intel’s computer chips, and it is aimed squarely at tablets, ...
ARM tried to break into the PC market but had a disastrous outing starting with Linux-based smartbooks and then tablets with Windows RT. But ARM is launching a comeback in PCs, and the third time ...
You win some, you lose some. Microsoft this week dropped support for ARM processors from its Surface tablets with the Surface 3, but adoption of the chip architecture in Chromebooks is growing.
Along with dozens of product launches and consumer technology news, CES 2011 brought news that the leading traditional PC chipmaker and the leading mobile device chipmaker are each looking to erode ...
Late yesterday, Intel took to the stage at Computex in Taiwan and announced its next steps towards mobile domination. To help with the development of touch-enabled tablets and ultrabooks, Intel is ...
Intel has been pursuing tablet design wins on the Chinese mainland for months with little to show for it. It all part of the chipmakers tablet strategy which basically revolves around Asia. Intel is ...
For more than a decade Arm Holdings has designed chips that have powered mobile handsets and smartphones like Apple’s iPhone. The company now faces a challenger in Intel, which recently demonstrated a ...
Intel is ramping up efforts to push low-power Atom chips in the burgeoning category of tablet devices, a market where the chip giant, which dominates netbooks, faces tough competition from rivals like ...
MIPS Technologies hopes to challenge ARM in the market for high-end tablets and smartphones with an upcoming processor design it presented at the HotChips conference in Silicon Valley on Tuesday. MIPS ...
Intel recently unveiled its next generation Core M (Broadwell) CPUs. Core M processors are about 50% smaller and 30% thinner than Intel's Haswell (Core i3, i5, i7) chips, with a 60% lower idle power ...
ARM co-founder Dr. Hermann Hauser on Friday offered scathing opinions of Intel and predicted the end of the microprocessor industry. ’The reason why ARM is going to kill the microprocessor is not ...