British chip designer eyes Google TV

British chip designer ARM Holdings said today its technology is ready for "Google TVs" and could be in the Internet-based devices…

British chip designer ARM Holdings said today its technology is ready for "Google TVs" and could be in the Internet-based devices next year if its partners can come out with products based on its designs.

If ARM's processors can find a spot in Google TVs or other similar televisions, ARM aims to have more than a 50 per cent share in the global set-top box and digital TV market in the next three to five years, versus about 30 per cent now.

"The traditional PC market is changing. Computing is not dead. Computing will continue and the growth and excitement is in new form factors and new business models and obviously TV is an example of that," ARM president Tudor Brown said.

"I am very confident that we will have a processor in a very high percentage of those TVs over a few
years," Mr Brown said in an interview in Taipei ahead of the start of Computex, the world's second-largest PC trade fair.

"We are already halfway through this year. It's not really us, it's our partners. It's people like TI, or Nvidia or Samsung."

"We have the basic technology capability to do it. ARM products are fast enough to do that, but the
question is which semiconductor companies want to build."

Earlier this month, Google showed off a risky attempt to marry the web to television and reach the $70 billion TV advertising market, chasing a dream that has eluded even archrival Apple.

Google is joining hands with Sony and Intel on the TV project.

The key to Google TV is an on-screen search box, just like on Google's website. The TV search box
accesses Google's search engine to look through live programs, DVR recordings and the web, delivering a relatively compact list of results that can be accessed with a push of the button.

TV could be a new growth engine for ARM, which has dominated the mobile phone market. It designs processor cores for chips that power more than 90 percent of the world's cellphones, and earns licence fees when chip makers agree to make chips based on its designs and royalties.

Companies including Texas Instruments, Qualcomm, and Nvidia are developing devices based on ARM-technology that would be suitable for use in many other portable gadgets, including mini, low-cost netbooks.

Mr Brown added that his company has been cooperating with many Taiwanese companies, which can also ride on the consumer boom.

"You can do a tear down of a Sony TV and see that it has a Mediatek chip in it which is ARM powered," Mr Brown said.

Reuters