NASA’s Next-Gen Ships Run on Last-Gen Chips

The future of spaceflight will be powered by a processor you wouldn’t want in your phone.

ARM’s A53 processor core would be an upgrade for NASA’s Orion program, meant to take humans to Mars and beyond.

Courtesy: NASA
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Earlier this summer, NASA announced that ARM Holdings’ A53 will be the microprocessor core design at the heart of the agency’s next generation of spacecraft. By the time the microprocessors are delivered in 2020, however, they’ll be so outmoded you wouldn’t want them in your phone. The A53 was introduced in 2014 and is already old by industry standards. ARM calls it “suitable for entry-level smartphones.” But most entry-level smartphones don’t have to avoid midair collisions or execute pinpoint landings.

Of course, as any user of an iPhone can attest, even the smartest of smartphones can hitch up and come to a screaming halt. In space, where tech support can’t hear you scream, Moore’s Law is less important than sheer durability.