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Episode 46: A Discussion with Arm CEO Rene Haas

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Manage episode 388790690 series 3428472
Content provided by Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg, Ben Bajarin, and Jay Goldberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg, Ben Bajarin, and Jay Goldberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Summary

In this conversation Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg have a discussion with Rene Haas, President of ARM, provides an overview of the company and its role as the brain that powers electronic devices. He explains ARM's business model of designing CPUs and licensing them to chip manufacturers. Haas discusses the value capture and increasing ARM's share of the value in the market. He highlights the growth drivers for ARM in various industries, including PCs, cloud data centers, networking, automotive, and IoT. Haas also addresses the impact of US sanctions on China and ARM's success in the Chinese market. He concludes by discussing ARM's partnership with Intel Foundry Services and the potential for chiplets.

Takeaways

  • ARM is the brain that powers electronic devices and is present in a wide range of products, including cell phones, laptops, automobiles, data centers, and IoT devices.
  • ARM's business model involves designing CPUs and licensing them to chip manufacturers, allowing them to build chips with ARM's designs.
  • To increase its share of the value in the market, ARM is focusing on delivering full solutions, accelerating chip design, and developing new products for growing markets.
  • ARM sees opportunities for growth in industries such as PCs, cloud data centers, networking, automotive, and IoT, driven by trends like AI and the need for more compute power.
  • ARM is navigating US sanctions on China by complying with export control restrictions and focusing on areas where its software ecosystem and partnerships are strong.

  continue reading

76 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 388790690 series 3428472
Content provided by Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg, Ben Bajarin, and Jay Goldberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg, Ben Bajarin, and Jay Goldberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Summary

In this conversation Ben Bajarin and Jay Goldberg have a discussion with Rene Haas, President of ARM, provides an overview of the company and its role as the brain that powers electronic devices. He explains ARM's business model of designing CPUs and licensing them to chip manufacturers. Haas discusses the value capture and increasing ARM's share of the value in the market. He highlights the growth drivers for ARM in various industries, including PCs, cloud data centers, networking, automotive, and IoT. Haas also addresses the impact of US sanctions on China and ARM's success in the Chinese market. He concludes by discussing ARM's partnership with Intel Foundry Services and the potential for chiplets.

Takeaways

  • ARM is the brain that powers electronic devices and is present in a wide range of products, including cell phones, laptops, automobiles, data centers, and IoT devices.
  • ARM's business model involves designing CPUs and licensing them to chip manufacturers, allowing them to build chips with ARM's designs.
  • To increase its share of the value in the market, ARM is focusing on delivering full solutions, accelerating chip design, and developing new products for growing markets.
  • ARM sees opportunities for growth in industries such as PCs, cloud data centers, networking, automotive, and IoT, driven by trends like AI and the need for more compute power.
  • ARM is navigating US sanctions on China by complying with export control restrictions and focusing on areas where its software ecosystem and partnerships are strong.

  continue reading

76 episodes

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