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What I am wondering though, among other things, is why Genesi releases a Cortex A8-based product *after* several A9-based products have been released. I'm thinking of the Nvidia Tegra 2-based phones (LG Optimus 2X, Motorola Atrix 4G) and tablets (Motorola Xoom, BlackBerry Playbook) and, of course, the iPad 2 with Apple's own A5 SoC.
Developing a product from scratch, as Genesi does, takes some time. Besides, the differences aren't really so great — newer cores are obviously more powerful, but not
so much more. They are both based on the same design — ARMv7.
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Also, I'm wondering what the roles of Freescale, Texas Instruments and Nvidia are here in ARM-land. Do these three companies all produce ARM-based SoCs for use in the devices of other companies (like Genesi, LG, Motorola, RIM)?
Exactly — it is the same as with, say, Intel and Dell.
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Why has Genesi (seemingly) chosen Freescale to provide the SoCs for their products? Why not TI or Nvidia?
Mainly for historical reasons: Genesi's products have always been based on chips by Freescale, so they've built a "friendly" relationship. Genesi is a small company, so having an alliance with someone more powerful is definitely a good thing.