Mobile chip design company ARM is targeting devices even smaller than smartphones and tablets.
Today ARM announced that it has purchased Sensinode, a Finland-based company that develops and promotes open standards for small connected devices, also known as the Internet of Things. ARM did not disclose the terms of the deal.
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The future of mobile computing lies in tiny connected devices — according to IMS Research, there will be a total of 30 billion connected devices by 2020. (That figure may even be a bit conservative.) It’s also not just about devices getting smaller, we’re also growing closer to them with every new generation of computing (something I explored in a recent GadgetBeat column).
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The Sensinode purchase will also help ARM push more open standards through its mbed project, an industry-wide effort to simplify development for connected devices by offering open source hardware and software.
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