From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "arm holdings"
(→Microarchitectures) |
m (→Cortex) |
||
Line 65: | Line 65: | ||
| style= margin-left: 20px; | | style= margin-left: 20px; | ||
| | | | ||
− | '''LP/Area: | + | '''LP/Area:''' |
* {{armh|Cortex-M0|l=arch}} | * {{armh|Cortex-M0|l=arch}} | ||
* {{armh|Cortex-M0+|l=arch}} | * {{armh|Cortex-M0+|l=arch}} | ||
Line 106: | Line 106: | ||
* {{armh|Hercules|l=arch}} | * {{armh|Hercules|l=arch}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | |||
=== Other === | === Other === | ||
{{collist | {{collist |
Revision as of 02:03, 23 August 2018
ARM Holdings | |
Type | Public |
Founded | November 27, 1990 |
Founder | Jamie Urquhart Mike Muller Tudor Brown Lee Smith John Biggs Harry Oldham Dave Howard Pete Harrod Harry Meekings Al Thomas Andy Merritt |
Headquarters | Cambridge, England |
Website | http://www.arm.com |
ARM Holdings, usually simply ARM, is a British multinational semiconductor and software design company. ARM was spun-off from Acorn Computers in November 1990 as Advanced RISC Machines, Ltd. (ARM, Ltd.) as a joint venture between Acorn Computers, Apple Computer, and VLSI Technology.
Microarchitectures
Classic
- ARM4 & ARM5 would've been during the time Acorn was spun off as ARM Holdings. The two versions were skipped.
Cortex
Real-Time:
Microcontroller:
LP/Area:
Performance/efficiency:
High Performance:
FPGA:
Mainstream:
ULP:
Big:
- Cortex-A15
- Cortex-A17
- Cortex-A57
- Cortex-A72
- Cortex-A73 (Artemis)
- Cortex-A75 (Prometheus)
- Cortex-A76 (Ares)
- Deimos
- Hercules
Other
Architectures
GPU:
ISAs
See Also
Facts about "ARM Holdings"
company type | public + |
founded | November 27, 1990 + |
founder | Jamie Urquhart +, Mike Muller +, Tudor Brown +, Lee Smith +, John Biggs +, Harry Oldham +, Dave Howard +, Pete Harrod +, Harry Meekings +, Al Thomas + and Andy Merritt + |
full page name | arm holdings + |
headquarters | Cambridge, England + |
instance of | semiconductor company + |
name | ARM Holdings + |
website | http://www.arm.com + |
wikidata id | Q296782 + |