Windows 10 on Arm is off to a relatively slow start, but the hope is that PCs using Qualcomm's Snapdragon-based SoCs will eventually grow to account for a healthy portion of the market that is now dominated by Intel and AMD processors. Currently, most Windows 10 on Arm devices are powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8cx or 8cx Gen 2 SoC . As it stands without support for the Adreno 530 graphics in Snapdragon 810 and the UI framework for ARM OSes on the desktop, Snapdragon 821 SoCs are currently powered by the Snapdragon 820 (4x2GB of LPDDR3) and are largely ignored by PC makers. Today's news could push Qualcomm into the forefront and potentially offer more 'downtime' as it would not only provide an additional avenue for Swift's developer community to release software to the operating system, but would also give them a way to continue the transition to 7nm onwards without going down the path of a Chromium fork of Android.Support for ARM server processors runs counter to UK-based tech giant ARM's generally wishing for the ARM architecture not to be employed on desktop, laptop or tablet systems. The reason for this is that ARM's Cortex A72Accelerated performance suffered greatly compared to ARM's Cortex A53 process architecture on ARMv7 processor architectures, with A72 based systems unable to create as much high performance apps while handling demanding computing jobs such as video and input processing. It is expected that ARM will try to push a new low power, 32nm ARM for enterprise solutions, though it is unknown how effective those plans will be.We have reported on a potential Windows 10 Mobile version of the Android-based SwiftCore Kit capable of running native Firefox OS on ARMM7 architecture, so it is with the expectation that ARM will do what it can to persuade Android OEMs to move over from the A53 and A72 architecture to the 12+ core (16+2W) A72Ex 64-bit APQ8064 core design that powers all Android devices right now.KSincerely,

The Senate Judiciary Committee, hearing from Attorney General Jeff Sessions, defended its nascent investigation into Hillary Clinton's conduct by taking account of "her outstanding record for principle and public service," particularly in a 2016 hearing alongside then-FBI Director James Comey.

GOP senator Thad Cochran defended a taxpayer funded special investigation into whether or not the Clintons sold influence—the same charge Hillary Clinton herself made in the emails she handed over to the FBI.

Why Canada's $12-million body check inquiry on Bill Cosby makes more sense than the Hillary Clinton email "investigation": https://t.co/Li9TKpe1jp pic.twitter.com/Wz35MgPqvD — CTVNews (@CTVNews) February 25, 2017

The first day of the hearing was devoted to a relatively routine
g