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ARM celebrates 20th birthday with new graphics wing

by Scott Bicheno on 30 November 2010, 17:56

Tags: ARM

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Coming of age

UK low-power chip designer ARM has been celebrating the 20th anniversary of the company for the past few days, and has chosen to coincide this event with the unveiling of a new building, which will house its growing graphics operations.

According to ARM's own timeline, the company actually came into existence 25 years ago as a division of Acorn Computer. When Acorn and Apple began collaborating on a chip to run Apple's ill-fated Newton handheld device, they spun-off that division to form ARM 20 years ago.

While ARM has come into the mainstream as smartphones and tablets - and the low-power processors required to run them - have taken the limelight away from PCs, it has been generating excitement for some time.

We have been speculating that its shares might be somewhat over-valued amid all the mobile fervour, but when it IPOed it generated a lot of investor interest, and its NASDAQ shares got close to $50 at the height of the dotcom bubble. They were $18.64 at time of writing.

Having established itself as the dominant low-power CPU designer, ARM has set its sights on low-power graphics, where former ally Imagination Technologies is the incumbent. To emphasise how serious it is about this market, ARM has announced the opening of a new building at its Cambridge campus that will house its multimedia processing team.

There are various celebrations going on, such as a massive piss-up tonight. We've also heard that every full-time employee got given an iPad. We'd like to offer our congratulations to ARM - it's great to see the UK well represented in a technology market dominated by the US and Taiwan. We'll leave you with this short video history made by ARM.

 

 



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I have to say I really like ARM having used some of their microcontrollers (well their licensees MCUs). The whole low power moderate performance thing is great. Hopefully they will have another great 20 years.