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StrongARM
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==SA-1110== The SA-1110 was a derivative of the SA-110 developed by Intel. It was announced on 31 March 1999, positioned as an alternative to the SA-1100.<ref>Intel Corporation (31 March 1999). "Intel StrongARM Processor, Companion Chip Optimized For Handheld Computing Devices". Press release.</ref> At announcement, samples were set for June 1999 and volume later that year. Intel discontinued the SA-1110 in early 2003.<ref>Martyn Williams (14 February 2003). "Intel puts StrongArm on death row". ''[[InfoWorld]]''.</ref> The SA-1110 was available in 133 or 206 MHz versions. It differed from the SA-1100 by featuring support for 66 MHz (133 MHz version only) or 103 MHz (206 MHz version only) [[SDRAM]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mdronline.com/publications/epw/issues/epw_42.html|title=The Linley Group - The industry's leading experts in communications semiconductor markets|work=mdronline.com}}</ref> Its companion chip, which provided additional support for peripherals, was the SA-1111. The SA-1110 was packaged in a 256-pin [[Ball grid array|micro ball grid array]]. It was used in mobile phones, personal data assistants (PDAs) such as the Compaq (later HP) [[iPAQ]] and HP [[Jornada (PDA)|Jornada]], the Sharp SL-5x00 Linux Based Platforms and the [[Simputer]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mdronline.com/publications/epw/issues/epw_101.html|title=The Linley Group - The industry's leading experts in communications semiconductor markets|work=mdronline.com}}</ref> It was also used to run the Intel Web Tablet, a tablet device that is considered potentially the first to introduce large screen, portable web browsing. Intel dropped the product just prior to launch in 2001.
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