
"ARM, maker of microprocessors and microcontrollers used in mobile and embedded electronics,
has joined the Linux Foundation. Amanda McPherson, vice president, marketing and developer programs, at The Linux Foundation said in the announcement 'By joining the Linux Foundation, ARM is demonstrating its commitment to open standards and Linux.' To date, ARM has shipped more than 10 billion ARM processors in mobile devices, many of which run Linux. Ian Drew, EVP Marketing at ARM, said that 'joining the Linux Foundation is a natural step towards advancing innovation in the Linux community for a rich, always-connected, computing experience.'"
Member since:
2006-01-03
I hope this means that ARM will actively contribute Linux drivers and documentation for all their peripherals.
Though ARM devices are pretty well supported, ARM is still very secretive about many bits, which are still undocumented but for proprietary software: For example, had Gazelle - their native Java instruction set - been open, maybe Android would have not felt the need to design their Dalvik VM and would've gone for plain Java, getting higher performance and lower power at the same time. Now it is too late, unfortunately; a large opportunity has been missed.
I think their 3D cores are undocumented also, and also there exist peripherals for which the documentation is available, but no Linux drivers have been written (SPI ports, CAN ports and some such things).