Texas Instruments eyes up ARM 10
News Texas Instruments is the largest maker of mobile phone semiconductors. Au said: "At any one time we will be talking to 5 or 6 partners, including Texas Instruments, about possible deals. ARM, sometimes described as the 'chipless chip company...
[July 7, 1999, 14:51]
Microsoft builds silicon foundation for Windows CE
News ARM's participation is necessary because the company designed the microprocessor core used in the cellphone chips made by Texas Instruments, Intel and the other companies. Texas Instruments, Intel, Samsung and Hynix already produce processors for...
[September 18, 2002, 13:42]
ARM spearheads mobile Linux group
News Members working with ARM include Marvell, MontaVista, Movial, Mozilla, Samsung and Texas Instruments. ARM is already a member of both LiPS and LiMo, MontaVista is a member of the MLI and LiPS, and Movial and Texas Instruments are both members of LiPS.
[October 4, 2007, 15:20]
TI chips to slip into Palms
News Handheld maker Palm announced on Monday that it has chosen chipmaker Texas Instruments to power its next generation of wireless handhelds. Under the deal, Palm's upcoming wireless devices will use Texas Instruments' chips and its OMAP (Open...
[December 18, 2001, 10:09]
Mobile-chip designers to incorporate better security
News Chipmaker Texas Instruments and chip designer ARM are working together to beef up security for handhelds following the emergence of the first virus to target cellphones. The two companies, both dominant suppliers and designers of cellphone chips...
[June 30, 2004, 9:10]
ARM launches low-power multimedia chip
News Texas Instruments (TI) also announced that it was the first customer for the new processors, which it plans to use across a range of products including low-power 3G devices. UK chipmaker ARM launched the Cortex A8 processor on Tuesday, claiming...
[October 5, 2005, 16:55]
Nuclear Science Group Develops Eclipse-Based App on Linux
White Papers The Gumtree application is being developed as part of the $330 million replacement research reactor and the neutron beam instruments is the scientific arm of the project. In what appears to be a coup for the IBM-born Eclipse open source Java...
[April 19, 2007, 1:00]
Texas Instruments backs mobile Linux
News Texas Instruments (TI) has joined the ranks of major players to throw its weight behind mobile Linux. Its founder members include ARM, France Telecom, MontaVista Software and PalmSource. Along with Telecom Italia and Chinese telecoms equipment...
[July 19, 2006, 11:10]
ChordGuru for WM 5.0
Downloads Here is a list of features:Graphical display of chord and fingerboardSupport for multiple instrumentsAbility to define your own instruments by specifying:Instrument nameNumber of strings/coursesTuningNumber of fretsHow many frets chords may...
[December 18, 2006, 6:00]
Palm launches new handhelds
News The £149 Tungsten E and $99 Zire 21 use Texas Instruments 126MHz OMAP311 ARM processors, but the E comes with 32MB of memory and a colour screen with a resolution of 320 pixels by 320 pixels, and the Zire 21 comes with 8MB of memory and a...
[October 1, 2003, 10:50]
Chip designers paint a brighter picture
News Texas Instruments holds licenses to several ARM processor cores, using them in chips for cellular phones, among other things. Chip designers, including companies such as ARM Holdings, Rambus and MIPS Technologies, sell their blueprints to companies...
[May 1, 2002, 7:31]
Imagination updates mobile 3D chip
News Five of Imagination's chip-making partners are displaying products at 3GSM, including Texas Instruments and ARM, the company said. Imagination's PowerVR MBX core, designed with industry-leading chip designer ARM, has been adopted by many phone...
[February 25, 2004, 13:50]
Palm reinvents the PDA
News The PalmOS 5-based device will use Texas Instruments' OMAP ARM-based processor, potentially boosting speeds by a factor or two or three. PalmOS 5 was developed for ARM-based processors, and adds support for bigger displays -- up to 320 by 320...
[September 19, 2002, 16:01]
Intel sees mature markets embracing low-cost PCs
News Intel's new Atom will bring the company into head-to-head competition with mobile-device processor manufacturers such as ARM and Texas Instruments. ARM's low-power chips are currently dominant in the mobile-devices market.
[March 10, 2008, 8:44]
Intel calls software makers to rally round XScale
News Other chipmakers, including Texas Instruments and Motorola, also make ARM-based processors for handheld computers; Palm, for example, has partnered with TI, Motorola and Intel for its next-generation, ARM-based PDAs.
[June 28, 2002, 16:01]
Mozilla moves ahead with mobile Firefox
News Look at ARM providing intellectual property, up to Texas Instruments making chipsets — there are a lot of partnerships in mobile and we encourage them to get involved. Nokia and ARM employees checking the code helps improve Fennec.
[February 19, 2009, 14:51]
Next-gen Palms promise double battery life
News Palm's three main silicon partners are Texas Instruments, Motorola and Intel, although other manufacturers can also make Palm chips. Motorola was demonstrating a version of Palm OS 5 -- the next-generation operating system -- running on the...
[May 22, 2002, 12:16]
Startup aims to inject zing into Net telephony
News Texas Instruments leads the DSP market with nearly 50 percent market share. A startup run by a former senior executive of chip designer ARM is launching Monday a new high-capacity processor for Internet telephony equipment and handheld devices.
[January 16, 2001, 8:37]
UK leads Europe in chip design
News The biggest semiconductor companies, such as Intel, Texas Instruments or Infineon still control most of their own design and manufacturing process, but they are increasingly turning to third-parties for designs or IP, as chips require more and...
[August 6, 2002, 15:09]
Mobile Internet and Bluetooth boost Parthus
News The companies who manufacture semiconductors for mobile devices, such as Texas Instruments, Nokia, Ericsson, Intel and others, may have been landed with the chip industry's worst-ever year, but they have no plans to cut their research and...
[July 24, 2001, 14:42]



