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In 2012, Rockchip shipped 10.5 million tablet processors, compared to 27.5 million for Allwinner. [43] However, for Q3 2013, Rockchip was forecast to ship 6 million tablet-use application processors in China, compared to 7 million for Allwinner who mainly shipped single-core products. [ 48 ]
However, for Q3 2013, Rockchip was forecast to ship 6 million tablet-use application processors in China, compared to 7 million for Allwinner who mainly shipped single-core products. [73] Rockchip was reported to be the number one supplier of tablet-use application processors in China in Q4 2013, Q1 2014 and Q2 2014. [9] [11]
The 16 cores in Rock are arranged in four core clusters.The cores in a cluster share a 32 KB instruction cache, two 32 KB data caches, and two floating point units.Sun designed the chip this way because server workloads usually have high re-utilization in data and instruction across processes and threads but low number of floating-point operations in general.
This is a list of products using processors (i.e. central processing units) ... ZiiLABS ZMS-05, Rockchip RK2806 and RK2808, NeoMagic MiMagic Family MM6, MM6+, MM8 ...
Rockchip (ARM-based) Amlogic (ARM-based) Allwinner (ARM-based) Samsung (ARM-based) SiFive (RISC-V-based, e.g. HiFive Unleashed) Texas Instruments (its own designs and ARM) Via (formerly Centaur Technology division), its own x86-based design; Wave Computing (previously MIPS Technologies), licenses MIPS CPU design; Zhaoxin (its own x86 design ...
The Rockchip RK3288 is an ARM architecture System on Chip (SoC) from Rockchip. It is the first SoC, in August 2014, that uses the 32-bit ARM Cortex-A17 processor. It is a quad-core processor with a NEON coprocessor and hardware acceleration for video and 3D graphics. It is used in a number of Chromebooks and other low-power, low-performance ...
This is a comparison of ARM instruction set architecture application processor cores designed by Arm Holdings (ARM Cortex-A) and 3rd parties. It does not include ARM Cortex-R, ARM Cortex-M, or legacy ARM cores.
The first processor with a Thumb instruction decoder was the ARM7TDMI. All processors supporting 32-bit instruction sets, starting with ARM9, and including XScale, have included a Thumb instruction decoder. It includes instructions adopted from the Hitachi SuperH (1992), which was licensed by ARM. [126]