CakeMonster
Golden Member
- Nov 22, 2012
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But what about features? I could sacrifice some CPU performance to get hardware encode/decode with the best video codecs enabling 4K 60fps recording for example...
Agreed. For the first time since 2011 Qualcomm is selling the clearly worse chip. I wonder if Exynos will come stateside. That is tempting..
CakeMonster said:But what about features? I could sacrifice some CPU performance to get hardware encode/decode with the best video codecs enabling 4K 60fps recording for example...
Begs the question how Qualcomm let them get into this situation.
They may be better off shipping a 32 bit Krait core...I mean seriously how much difference is 64 bit going to make until there's optimized code out there?
It is a marketing problem, just like with the core count thing.
Qualcomm can't sell top shelf dual core SoCs or 32 bit SoCs, because if they do Rockchip or whoever will swoop in with four low power 64 bit cores and eat their lunch on a marketing bullet. Maybe if Apple was still 32bit they would have an argument, but that ship has sailed.
When Apple launched that 5S it was a headshot to the Qualcomm product line. This has been obvious for a while, I was beating the "Qualcomm's 2015 SoCs are going to suck" drum hard last year.
I wonder, how much of this "moar cores" philosphy is even useful in a phone? It doesn't seem like a cellphone OS is the most parallel of tasks.
I'm impressed this has caught up to the current A series. From the A7 on, it has dominated its direct competition. For the first time in a while, even midway through the iPhone cycle, it looks like Samsung has caught up. Not exceeded in any real world case, but caught up at least for 6 months.
http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench3/compare/1786937?baseline=1780313
They may be better off shipping a 32 bit Krait core...I mean seriously how much difference is 64 bit going to make until there's optimized code out there?
The only thing is, the Krait core really has been plateauing for a while. From the S800 introduced in summer 2013 to end of year 2014, the increase in performance has been relatively small, especially considering progress elsewhere.
How could QC think their Krait core could get through yet another year (2015)?
They may be better off shipping a 32 bit Krait core...I mean seriously how much difference is 64 bit going to make until there's optimized code out there?
Qualcomm said:We have lowered our outlook for the second half of fiscal 2015 in our semiconductor business, QCT, largely driven by the effects of:
- A shift in share among OEMs at the premium tier, which has reduced our near-term opportunity for sales of our integrated Snapdragon™ processors and has skewed our product mix towards more modem chipsets in this tier;
- Expectations that our Snapdragon 810 processor will not be in the upcoming design cycle of a large customer’s flagship device; and
- Heightened competition in China.
Rumor is that the body will be all aluminum.
I hope not! As long as they just replace the silver faux metal band with something durable I'd be happy. I actually like the dimpled soft touch on the black S5.
Maybe sort out a better speaker placement as well, that always looked a bit unfinished.
It would be a marketing nightmare for Qualcomm to go 32 bit in 2015.
I dont get that at all.
People were really choosing what phone to buy depending on if the SOC was 64bit capable?
People would go into their preferred phone supplier and go 'I shall shun those lesser 32bit SOCs, I need a 64bit one because... for the... um... I NEED THE BIGGER NUMBERS DAMMIT!!!'
But with Android 5.0, wouldn't a 32-bit SOC be disadvantaged in benchmarks and such?
Sure they could get through the marketing disadvantage and maybe there wouldn't be much real world difference between the S810 and whatever a 20-nm S805 would be, but competitors would likely be able to trumpet superior scores.
Which competitors? And how are they going to lever a 64bit advantage?
Honestly, 64bit means nothing in the mobile world.
64-bit wouldn't mean much on the mobile by just being 64-bit, but didn't ARM improve the instruction sets going from ARMv7 to ARMv8?