Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 18th Sep 2009 17:30 UTC, submitted by Moulinneuf
Hardware, Embedded Systems We all know (and love?) ARM as the company which focusses on licensing designs for power-efficient yet still powerful processors, mostly used in embedded devices. The Cambridge company has been looking to expand into the netbook market, and has now announced a new step in this process with a number of new multicore Cortex-A9 designs.
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RE[2]: Reallife test
by cerbie on Wed 23rd Sep 2009 16:28 UTC in reply to "RE: Reallife test"
cerbie
Member since:
2006-01-02

That has almost everything to do with the SSDs, and tweaking the init scripts, not so much the CPU. The real tasks to be concerned with are the likes of handling documents, browsing the web, etc.. They boast about theoretical potential, but we need to see some actual tests.

That said, even if it performs at 1/4 the Atom for real use, it will be compelling for netbooks, since you could have days of battery life, and/or netbooks well under 1lb, since RAM and display would be the dominant power hogs.

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