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Huawei free to license latest ARM architecture: report

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Huawei free to license latest ARM architecture: report
Arm Holdings says its latest chip architecture, Armv9, is not subject to US Export Administration Regulations
By DAVE MAKICHUKAPRIL 2, 2021

1617403164834.png

ARM has just announced that its latest A9 architecture could potentially be licensed to Huawei Technologies. This could ease the latter’s supply chain issues and is possible since the new chip technology is of British origin. Credit: ARM Holdings.
Besieged telecom giant Huawei received some good news this week — a development which could ease the pressure on its chip division, HiSilicon.
UK-based chip designer ARM Holdings said that its latest chip architecture, Armv9, is not subject to the US’s Export Administration Regulations, which means it is able to be licensed to Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei.
According to The Global Times and Yicai.com, ARM said it has IPs that originate from the US as well as outside the US, and after thorough investigations, it confirmed that the Armv9 architecture is not under the rule of EAR, the US restrictions on supplying Huawei.
Ian Smythe, vice-president of solutions marketing at the ARM stated during a media event in Beijing earlier this week that “Following a comprehensive review, ARM has determined that its Armv9 architecture is not subject to the US Export Administration Regulations.”
He further added that the company has also shared its review to the appropriate US government agencies as well.

It is good news for Huawei and its chip arm, HiSilicon, which is blacklisted by the US government, but the significance might be limited as the Chinese company still faces pressures finding chip manufacturers, Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Beijing-based Information Consumption Alliance, told Global Times.

“It is a small success for Huawei. The ARM architecture is a basic framework for chip design,” Xiang said, “The Kirin 990 chip, for example, is built based on the ARM’s design architecture.”

Arm disclosed some details about the latest Armv9 architecture, and the company expects it will be used in over 300 billion chips in the coming years.

According to the company, the new Armv9 focuses on three areas: performance, security, and machine learning (ML) capabilities.



ARM says the design will provide more than a 30% CPU performance boost over the next two generations of mobile and infrastructure CPUs.


It is not the first time that ARM has decided to continue supplying chip technology to Huawei. In 2019, Huawei secured a lifelong license of the Armv8-A architecture from the chip designer.

Security is a major pillar of ARM’s new design.

Its Confidential Compute Architecture (CCA) “shields portions of code and data from access or modification while in-use, even from privileged software, by performing computation in a hardware-based secure environment.”

The CCA will use a concept called Realms, a “region that is separate from both the secure and non-secure worlds.”

For example, ARM says a business application could use Realms to protect sensitive data from the rest of the system “while it is in-use, at rest, and in transit.”


For those unaware, ARM sells processor designs and licenses its instruction set to various companies including, Apple, Samsung Electronics, and even Qualcomm.

Apple’s M1 chip, powering the latest Macs, uses an ARM design.

The company’s technology is also gaining a foothold in other markets, such as personal computers and servers.

Meanwhile, according to new reports the Huawei P50 series of flagship smartphones may face further delays.

There’s a possibility that the announcement could take place in April and the devices be made available for purchase a month later.


However, the new report claims that the Huawei P50 series may get further delayed and could be made official in June later this year.

This is mainly because of the supply chain and production issues that the company faces which is a result of the sanctions imposed on the Chinese giant by the US.

Sources: Global Times, Yicai.com, GizmoChina, AppleInsider


 
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Huawei is already deeply involved in its RISC-V developments may still considered the non US proposal in its studies.

It was US Nvdia acquisition of ARM that triggered the whole decoupling after Trump illegal unilateral sanction of Huawei.

There are rumors that Huawei is already quite advanced in its development of its own IPR Lithography Machines.
 
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Huawei is already deeply involved in its RISC-V developments may still considered the non US proposal in its studies.

It was US Nvdia acquisition of ARM that triggered the whole decoupling after Trump illegal unilateral sanction of Huawei.

There are rumors that Huawei is already quite advanced in its development of its own IPR Lithography Machines.

Nvidia never acquired ARM. Take your propaganda elsewhere bro.
 
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Britain shouldn't be trusted. They are still fuming losing Hong Kong to the Chinese.
Britain shouldn't be trusted. They are still fuming losing Hong Kong to the Chinese.
Huawei doesn't have a choice to be honest. Where else are they going to go for such things ? Lol. It's not like they have many choices to choose from. So better to deal with what they get.
 
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Huawei free to license latest ARM architecture: report
Arm Holdings says its latest chip architecture, Armv9, is not subject to US Export Administration Regulations
By DAVE MAKICHUKAPRIL 2, 2021

View attachment 730642
ARM has just announced that its latest A9 architecture could potentially be licensed to Huawei Technologies. This could ease the latter’s supply chain issues and is possible since the new chip technology is of British origin. Credit: ARM Holdings.
Besieged telecom giant Huawei received some good news this week — a development which could ease the pressure on its chip division, HiSilicon.
UK-based chip designer ARM Holdings said that its latest chip architecture, Armv9, is not subject to the US’s Export Administration Regulations, which means it is able to be licensed to Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei.
According to The Global Times and Yicai.com, ARM said it has IPs that originate from the US as well as outside the US, and after thorough investigations, it confirmed that the Armv9 architecture is not under the rule of EAR, the US restrictions on supplying Huawei.
Ian Smythe, vice-president of solutions marketing at the ARM stated during a media event in Beijing earlier this week that “Following a comprehensive review, ARM has determined that its Armv9 architecture is not subject to the US Export Administration Regulations.”
He further added that the company has also shared its review to the appropriate US government agencies as well.

It is good news for Huawei and its chip arm, HiSilicon, which is blacklisted by the US government, but the significance might be limited as the Chinese company still faces pressures finding chip manufacturers, Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Beijing-based Information Consumption Alliance, told Global Times.

“It is a small success for Huawei. The ARM architecture is a basic framework for chip design,” Xiang said, “The Kirin 990 chip, for example, is built based on the ARM’s design architecture.”

Arm disclosed some details about the latest Armv9 architecture, and the company expects it will be used in over 300 billion chips in the coming years.

According to the company, the new Armv9 focuses on three areas: performance, security, and machine learning (ML) capabilities.



ARM says the design will provide more than a 30% CPU performance boost over the next two generations of mobile and infrastructure CPUs.


It is not the first time that ARM has decided to continue supplying chip technology to Huawei. In 2019, Huawei secured a lifelong license of the Armv8-A architecture from the chip designer.

Security is a major pillar of ARM’s new design.

Its Confidential Compute Architecture (CCA) “shields portions of code and data from access or modification while in-use, even from privileged software, by performing computation in a hardware-based secure environment.”

The CCA will use a concept called Realms, a “region that is separate from both the secure and non-secure worlds.”

For example, ARM says a business application could use Realms to protect sensitive data from the rest of the system “while it is in-use, at rest, and in transit.”


For those unaware, ARM sells processor designs and licenses its instruction set to various companies including, Apple, Samsung Electronics, and even Qualcomm.

Apple’s M1 chip, powering the latest Macs, uses an ARM design.

The company’s technology is also gaining a foothold in other markets, such as personal computers and servers.

Meanwhile, according to new reports the Huawei P50 series of flagship smartphones may face further delays.

There’s a possibility that the announcement could take place in April and the devices be made available for purchase a month later.


However, the new report claims that the Huawei P50 series may get further delayed and could be made official in June later this year.

This is mainly because of the supply chain and production issues that the company faces which is a result of the sanctions imposed on the Chinese giant by the US.

Sources: Global Times, Yicai.com, GizmoChina, AppleInsider


It's a monkey business - throw money and you will get what you want.
They will cross every hurdle with ease.
 
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ARM is not the only one that can design a chip.

You are right, anyone can design a chip. The problem China has, it needs access to either X86, or ARM instruction sets to do something "useful" as it is about the ecosystem being able do something useful with software.

China can design a brand new greenfield instruction set and call it..... LM-35 ... for Long March 35... and then get all its manufacturers etc to use it...

But, until you have the software ecosystem built on top of that is designed to run software on top of it, it is pointless, or a v.v.v.v. long lived project to maturity.

Right now, China has no choice but to License the ARM instruction set as the time to build a new ecosystem is very difficult and by the time you have, that technology will be outdated as industry will move forward while you are trying to play catchup.

Once again, Huawei has no choice right now.
 
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:coffee: :sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:

Huawei do have a choice.
You are free to believe what the US News Media wants you to believe.
it is too late.
Huawei has started already designing its chips based on RISC-V.

Although ARM is now trying very hard to woo its major customer Huawei by assuring them that USA has no says in this latest version, they developed.
IMO this just in case they failed to get the approval for acquisition by Nvdia, the future of the company is looking dire.

But after Trump, i doubt Huawei which was bitten will want to be bitten again, twice.
The price to be paid for being an unreliable...

Recently I started using Huawei Petal Search. I am amazed by its speed.
IMO it is as good if not better than Google.
 
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Right now, I am using Huawei Petal Search 50% of the time. It is quite uaer friendly.

For me Google is just my old habit but it slow compared with Petal Search. :coffee:
 
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