ARM Limited

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ARM Limited
Type Public (LSEARM, NASDAQARMHY)
Founded 1990
Headquarters Cambridge, England, UK
Key people Sir Robin Saxby, Warren East, Tim Score
Industry RISC Microprocessors
Products Processor IP; Physical IP
Revenue ~GB£263 million/year (2006, US GAAP)
Operating income ~GB£90.1 million/year
Net income ~GB£45 million/year
Employees 1,667 (March 2007)
Website www.arm.com
The entrance to ARM's headquarters in Cherry Hinton, Cambridge, England (52.18177° N 0.17824° E)
The entrance to ARM's headquarters in Cherry Hinton, Cambridge, England (52.18177° N 0.17824° E)

ARM Limited (LSEARM, NASDAQARMHY) is a technology company headquartered in England, UK. Founded in 1990, the company is best known for its processors, although it also designs, licenses and sells software development tools under the RealView and KEIL brands, systems and platforms, system-on-a-chip infrastructure and software. ARM is listed under its associated holding company (ARM Holdings PLC) on the London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ. It is probably the best-known of the Silicon Fen companies.

The company was founded as a joint venture between Acorn Computers and Apple Computer (as Advanced RISC Machines), intended to further the development of the Acorn RISC Machine's RISC chip, which was originally used in the Acorn Archimedes and is now the processing core for many custom application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs). It has since expanded and now has offices and design centres across the world, including Sunnyvale, California, Austin, Texas, Olympia, Washington, Trondheim, Norway, Sophia Antipolis, France, Munich, Germany, Leuven, Belgium, Taiwan, Shin Yokohama, Japan, China, and India.

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A characteristic feature of ARM processors is their low electric power consumption, which makes them particularly suitable for use in portable devices. In fact, almost all modern mobile phones and personal digital assistants contain ARM CPUs, making them the most widely-used 32-bit microprocessor family in the world, more so than the better-known 32-bit Pentium 4 processors found in many PCs. Today ARMs account for over 75% of all 32-bit embedded CPUs.[1]

ARM processors are used as the main CPU for most mobile phones, including those manufactured by Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Samsung; many personal digital assistants and handhelds, like the Apple iPod & iPhone [1], Nintendo Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS, Gamepark GP32, and Gamepark Holdings GP2X; as well as many other applications, including GPS, digital cameras, digital televisions, network devices and storage.

Unlike other microprocessor corporations such as AMD, Intel, Freescale (formerly Motorola) and Renesas (formerly Hitachi and Mitsubishi), ARM only licenses its technology as intellectual property (IP), rather than manufacturing its own CPUs. Thus, there are a few dozen companies making processors based on ARM's designs. Intel, Freescale and Renesas have all licensed ARM technology. In 2005, 1.7 billion chips based on an ARM design were manufactured.

Along the way, ARM has grown both through internal financing and acquisitions.

  • In 1993 First profitable year
  • In 1994 Silicon Valley and Tokyo offices open
  • In 1998 Advanced RISC Machines Ltd name is changed to ARM Ltd, 50 million cores a year shipped.
  • In 1998 ARM IPO on both LSE & NASDAQ
  • In 1999 ARM acquired Micrologic Solutions, a software consulting company based in Cambridge, UK
  • In 2001, ARM acquired the engineering team of Noral Micrologics, a debug hardware and software company based in Blackburn, UK.
  • In 2002, Artisan Components acquired NurLogic Design a PHY and analogue mixed signal company based in San Diego, CA. China office is opened.

The acronym ARM originally stood for Acorn RISC Machine. The company name ARM stands for Advanced RISC Machines. This name was changed, around the time of the IPO, to "ARM Holdings", since it was felt the term RISC, which indicates a type of CPU design, being phonetically identical to risk, would deter people unfamiliar with computers.

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