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Arm Launches Mbed Linux and Extends Pelion IoT Service

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Linux

Politics and international relations may be fraught with acrimony these days, but the tech world seems a bit friendlier of late. Last week Microsoft joined the Open Invention Network and agreed to grant a royalty-free, unrestricted license of its 60,000-patent portfolio to other OIN members, thereby enabling Android and Linux device manufacturers to avoid exorbitant patent payments. This week, Arm and Intel kept up the happy talk by agreeing to a partnership involving IoT device provisioning.

Arm’s recently announced Pelion IoT Platform will align with Intel’s Secure Device Onboard (SDO) provisioning technology to make it easier for IoT vendors and customers to onboard both x86 and Arm-based devices using a common Peleon platform. Arm also announced Pelion related partnerships with myDevices and Arduino (see farther below).

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Arm doodles server, comms CPUs in public before they leak out...

  • Arm doodles server, comms CPUs in public before they leak out in open-source code...

    Japanese chip designer Arm has lightly sketched out in public its future processor designs that are aimed at powering internet servers and infrastructure.

    Think CPU cores, chip interconnects, memory subsystems, and so on, for semiconductor manufacturers to use in silicon brains for data center systems, edge devices, and networking and telecommunications gear. Arm really wants to nuzzle its way into server and telecoms racks, tiptoeing past Intel Xeons and AMD Epycs, and so here's the intellectual property it hopes will do the trick.

    And we're not joking when we're say lightly sketched: the biz has only shown off a roadmap of codenames and process nodes. Arm is going public with these plans partly because source code supporting these future chip designs will soon be trickling into the Linux kernel and other open-source projects referencing said codenames, so it may as well spill some beans now to head off speculation.

Arm cozies up to Intel for second time in a week

  • Arm cozies up to Intel for second time in a week – this time to borrow tools from Yocto Project for Mbed Linux

    Earlier this week, Arm drew Intel into its warm embrace when Chipzilla joined its Pelion IoT platform. The Softbank-owned design house has said it's now preparing to release a Linux-based OS, taking advantage of the Intel-backed Yocto Project tools.

    Arm's Mbed Linux OS takes the company's Internet of Things-focused realtime software stack Mbed, and runs it on the Linux kernel, with a particular focus on Cortex-A system-on-chips, and packages it with Yocto Project tools and recipes. That project is heavily supported by Intel, which co-founded the effort, which helps engineers build Linux-powered embedded electronics.

    Mark Knight, an Arm product director, explained this week that the Mbed community has been working to strip down and harden the operating system, make it suitable for devices that live longer than the handful of years expected of laptops or phones, and need secure update and remote management mechanisms.

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