ARM
Latest about ARM

Is Nvidia opening up its NVLink doors even further? New partnership with AMD will see greater integration across many kinds of chips
By Efosa Udinmwen published
Nvidia NVLink Fusion now integrates with Arm-based Neoverse CPUs, enabling hyperscalers and governments to deploy GPUs efficiently in workstations and servers.

You don't need a gaming laptop to play Fortnite smoothly anymore – it can now run on super-thin-and-light Copilot+ laptops
By Darren Allan published
Always wanted to play Fortnite on your Snapdragon X laptop? Your dream has come true – and the battle royale reportedly runs smoothly.

Windows 11 looks set for a big update early in 2026, but most people won't get it
By Darren Allan published
A rumor contends that Microsoft is planning a version 26H1 of Windows 11 specifically for Snapdragon X2 Elite laptops.

Google is undertaking a mass migration to Arm - find out the secrets behind what it takes for the world's biggest companies to port their internal workloads to new hardware
By Efosa Udinmwen published
Google is reengineering its global infrastructure, migrating tens of thousands of workloads from x86 to custom Arm CPUs using AI automation.

It took nearly a year, but Microsoft has finally improved Windows 11 to run more PC games on Arm laptops
By Darren Allan published
Windows 11 update packs a big improvement for gamers running Arm CPUs – but it took a long time to arrive.

TikTok owner is collaborating with AMD, Arm, and Intel on making firmware solutions better - ByteDance is the only Chinese company participating in this major project
By Efosa Udinmwen published
OpenSFI unites major chipmakers and cloud firms to standardize firmware-silicon communication, bridging vendors and architectures for global platform efficiency.

Arm unveils new Lumex AI focused smartphone CPUs with some impressive stats
By Craig Hale published
Next-generation smartphones could use Arm’s architecture for better on-device AI performance.

Arm brings back ex-VP of engineering from AWS as it may seek to compete with its own customers with rival server CPUs
By Efosa Udinmwen published
Arm is moving from licensing designs to building chips, hiring seasoned engineers, and risking conflict with major customers over royalties.
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