Arm, the chip designer known for powering nearly every smartphone and PCs, is set to unveil its first-ever processor this year, with Meta as its launch partner. Arm's designs are already widely used in smartphones, Apple Macs, and Qualcomm-powered Windows PCs, thanks to their energy efficiency. Arm has never made its own chips before; instead, it licenses its designs to companies like Apple and Qualcomm, who then customize and manufacture them through third-party foundry such as TSMC. Read more in our articles including "Arm plans to develop its own in-house chip" and "ARM announces 2.5GHz Cortex-A15 MPCore".
Arm, the chip designer known for powering nearly every smartphone and PCs, is set to unveil its first-ever processor this year, with Meta as its launch partner. Arm's designs are already widely used in smartphones, Apple Macs, and Qualcomm-powered Windows PCs, thanks to their energy efficiency.
Arm has never made its own chips before; instead, it licenses its designs to companies like Apple and Qualcomm, who then customize and manufacture them through third-party foundry such as TSMC.
Our coverage of Arm processor design includes: "Arm plans to develop its own in-house chip"; "ARM announces 2.5GHz Cortex-A15 MPCore"; "BIR opens Tax Payer Portal". Each article provides unique insights and information.