ARM is an acronym for Advanced RISC Machines. These processors are named after the firm that first made them: Advanced RISC Machines Ltd. Then ARM (Ltd.) sold a license for the ARM (architecture) to DEC (Digital Equipment Corp.), which named their variant StrongARM. Then DEC sold their division that made StrongARM to Intel, who now makes StrongARM. Now you can get ARMs from ARM and Intel, but not DEC. Simple, yes?
More information
More information
Subcategories 4
Related categories 4
Sites 3
Growing entry, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia]
Designs and licenses fast, low-cost, low-power RISC processors, peripherals, and 'system-chips' for embedded control, consumer/educational multimedia, portable systems, Acorn RISC OS PCs, DSP.
Dedicated to ARM Core Families target port. Goal: collect and maintain references to official GCC pages related to the ARM port, collect results; results, documents, links.
Designs and licenses fast, low-cost, low-power RISC processors, peripherals, and 'system-chips' for embedded control, consumer/educational multimedia, portable systems, Acorn RISC OS PCs, DSP.
Dedicated to ARM Core Families target port. Goal: collect and maintain references to official GCC pages related to the ARM port, collect results; results, documents, links.
Growing entry, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia]
