The ARM community’s attempts to push its favored processor architecture into servers has not had much success so far. Start-ups like Calxeda moved too early, when ARM was only a 32-bit platform. But even after it went 64-bit, it has made little dent in Intel’s dominance of server chips. Even Qualcomm is reported to have put its much-heralded server platform on the back burner, having failed to secure hoped-for deals with webscale firms like Google. The only big name with an ARM-based position in the cloud and server processor space is currently Cavium, now part of Marvell, which was also an early-stage ARM server pioneer, but made little impact on the overall market. Many of the new challengers will come…