ARM working with Microsoft on 64-bit Windows OS

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5 November 2012

ARM is working with Microsoft to tune the Windows OS to work on processors based on ARM’s 64-bit architecture, an ARM official said.
 
Ian Forsyth, program manager at ARM, could not comment on a specific release date for the 64-bit version of Windows for ARM processors, but said ARM is continuously working with software partners to add 64-bit support.
 
"ARM works with all its OS and ecosystem partners to inform them on next generation technologies and enable their support," said Nandan Nayampally, head of ARM’s processor marketing division. ARM’s TechCon show is currently going on in Santa Clara, California.

Specific product support questions would need to be directed to the partners, Nayampally said. A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment on specifics of the 64-bit version of Windows RT, saying it had no information to share at this time.
 
Microsoft has released Windows RT, an OS that is 32-bit and works with ARM processors, and also released Windows 8, which works on x86 processors and is 64-bit. ARM has announced its first 64-bit processor designs, Cortex-A57 and Cortex-A53, which are based on ARM’s Armv8 architecture. The chip designer said that it expects servers and mobile devices based on the processors to reach the market in 2014.
 
Windows RT is on tablets with 32-bit processors from Nvidia and Qualcomm. Microsoft’s Surface and Asus’ Vivo Tab RT tablet have Nvidia’s quad-core Tegra 3 processor, while Dell’s XPS 10 and Samsung’s P8510 Ativ Tab have Qualcomm’s dual-core Snapdragon S4 processor.
 
The 32-bit Windows RT OS has a limited memory ceiling, and a 64-bit Windows RT OS would expand the memory capacity in tablets and PCs. A 64-bit version of Windows on ARM would also bring it on par with Windows 8.
 
Nvidia is developing a processor core based on ARM’s 64-bit architecture under the code-name Project Denver. Nvidia declined to comment on development of 64-bit software for Windows.
 
A Qualcomm spokeswoman said the company cannot comment at this time on specific product plans. However, Qualcomm is an ARM partner and helps explore and evaluate emerging technologies including 64-bit software support, the spokeswoman said.
 
Microsoft’s interest is not surprising since the move to 64-bit seems like a natural progression for ARM and supporting vendors, just as it was for x86, said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.
 
But software would need to be written to support the 64-bit ARM instruction set, and porting many x86 64-bit applications is a challenge, King said. Existing applications that ran on previous versions of Windows do not run on RT.

"From a purely technical perspective, porting many common x86 applications to ARM is problematic," King said.
 
There are also questions on how developers will take the move from 32-bit to 64-bit, King said. But if customers want applications, the developers will deliver.
 
"These are some of the obvious challenges. Fortunately, everyone involved has a year or more to sort things out," King said.

IDG News Service

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