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ARM architecture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | ARM CPUs are found in all corners of consumer electronics, from portable devices (PDAs, mobile phones, media players, handheld gaming units, and calculators) to computer peripherals (hard drives, desktop routers.) The most noticeable branch in this family nowadays is Intel's XScale. |
 | | ARM has implemented a technology that allows certain of their architectures to execute Java bytecode natively in hardware, as another execution mode. |
 | | Although ARM's license terms are covered by NDA, within the IP industry, ARM is widely known to be among the most expensive CPU cores. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/ARM_architecture (2381 words) |
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