ARM Technology Conference To Address Developing For Post-PC Era

ARM and Partners share key technologies and insights for designing smart mobile devices

SAN JOSE, Calif. – During the past two years a clear transition has taken place around connected mobile devices, signaling the birth of a post-PC era of computing. At this year’s ARM® Technology Conference, ARM will highlight one of the latest, quickly expanding category of smart mobile device – the tablet.

There are more than 20 billion ARM-powered chips in devices around the globe, and the first ARM-based tablets have been either released or announced by leading OEMs. According to leading analyst firms, the mobile computing market is expected to grow to 500 million units by 2014.

ARM processor technology is being leveraged by device manufacturers to address the growing expectations of mobile consumers including:

• Access to information when, where and how they want it
• An always-on, always-connected computing experience
• A rich multimedia experience with no compromises in audio and video playback

Throughout the conference, several tracks provide the building blocks for those designing smart mobile device systems. A summary of specific tracks is included below.

If you’re in the San Jose area and only interested in attending one class, ARM is offering a special free admission – one-class passes are now available for ARM Techcon. Use the promo code “ONE” at registration. .

Please visit the ARM Technology Conference webpage for more information about attending.

A Sampling of Tracks for Mobile Computing:

Exploring the Design of the CortexTM-A15 Processor

Android for ARM and TI-based eBook Development

High Integrity Java for High Volume Applications

System Coherency: Cortex™-A15 & Mali – selecting right system IP for performance

Mobile Power Efficiency on a Laptop w/ 1st ARM Cortex™-A9 2GHz dual core system

DS-5 plus Linaro

Are System Developers Ready for Applications to Drive & Define a New World Order

Bringing High Performance HTML5.0 to ARM

High Performance OpenCL on Next Generation Mali GPUs

Tablet Teardown

The Future of Embedded Graphics Processors