After a fairly long time during which ARM stated its intention to power processors aimed at the enterprise market, Marvell seems to have finally turned this goal into a reality with the ARMADA XP.So far, the x86 architecture has practically owned not just the consumer, but the enterprise market as well.This is quite... |
8 November 2010 08:55 GMT |
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Though product demonstrations usually come accompanied by at least a meager spec sheet, Marvell decided that it was more interesting if its upcoming product remained shrouded in as thick a mystery veil as possible. To this end, it brought out its soon-to-be ARM-powered slate at the Netbook Summit in San Francisco, bu... |
26 May 2010 03:48 GMT |
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Marvell is known for making unusual chips that end up going beyond standards. In fact, last year, the hardware maker demonstrated its Plug Computing initiative when it released the SheevaPlug development platform, meant to build extremely cheap, low-power CPUs used in small Plugtop PCs that connect devices with each ... |
22 April 2010 06:58 GMT |
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All end-users have undoubtedly heard, seen or learned in some other way of the futuristic view of students going to school with nothing but a portable database, like a tablet PC, which can remove the need for any sort of textbooks. Marvell seems to be especially interested in this idea of the future, as it is evident... |
19 March 2010 07:03 GMT |
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Leading provider of communications and consumer silicon solutions Marvell announced on Monday its ARMADA family of processors aimed at next-generation ARM instruction set smartphones, smartbooks, as well as consumer and embedded devices. The chips come with great mobility, featuring both lightweight designs and great... |
20 October 2009 04:56 GMT |
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