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== History == | == History == | ||
{{see also|arm/history|l1=ARM's History}} | {{see also|arm/history|l1=ARM's History}} | ||
− | Following ARM's incorporation in November 1990 after being spun-off from [[Acorn Computers]], ARM continued to develop the ARM microprocessor. In | + | Following ARM's incorporation in November 1990 after being spun-off from [[Acorn Computers]], ARM continued to develop the ARM microprocessor. In 1993 ARM introduced the ARM6 MacroCell, a substantial improvement over the previous {{acorn|ARM3|l=arch}} microarchitecture. The same year ARM signed with a number of additional licensees beyond [[VLSI Technology]], including [[Sharp]] and [[GEC-Plessey]]. |
The popularity of the ARM6 can be largely attributed to [[Apple]]'s adaptation of the processor in their {{apple|Newton}} PDAs. | The popularity of the ARM6 can be largely attributed to [[Apple]]'s adaptation of the processor in their {{apple|Newton}} PDAs. |
Facts about "ARM6 - Microarchitectures - ARM"
codename | ARM4 + |
core count | 1 +, 4 +, 6 + and 8 + |
designer | 1 + and ARM Holdings + |
full page name | arm holdings/microarchitectures/arm6 + |
instance of | microarchitecture + |
instruction set architecture | ARMv3 +, ARMv4 + and ARMv6 + |
manufacturer | GEC-Plessey Semiconductors +, Sharp + and VLSI Technology + |
microarchitecture type | CPU + |
name | ARM4 + |
phase-out | 0202 JL + |
pipeline stages | 3 + |
pipeline stages (min) | 12 + |
process | 800 nm (0.8 μm, 8.0e-4 mm) + |
processing element count | 4 +, 6 +, 8 + and 2 + |