Qualcomm's Snapdragon 835 is Its First 10-Nanometer SoC (engadget.com) 70
An anonymous reader writes: Chipset maker Qualcomm has unveiled its next-gen Snapdragon 835 flagship SOC and confirmed rumors that it will be built by Samsung using its 10-nanometer FinFET process. Compared to the current 14-nanometer Snapdragon 821 (also built by Samsung), the new CPU packs 30 percent more parts into the same space, yielding 27 percent better performance while drawing up to 40 percent less power, the company says. It also improved the design, which will yield "significant" improvements to battery life. The new chip comes with Quick Charge 4, which supports 20 percent faster charging than Qualcomm's last-gen tech. That, the company says, will give you up to five hours of extra battery life with just a five-minute charge. In just 15 minutes, it'll give Snapdragon 835 phones a half-full battery.
5 hours? (Score:2)
How long is this thing supposed to run?
Most smartphones only run like 3 hours tops if your actively using the screen.
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Obviously it depends on battery capacity and screen brightness
Re:5 hours? (Score:5, Informative)
How long is this thing supposed to run? Most smartphones only run like 3 hours tops if your actively using the screen.
screens and LTE radio's are the 2 biggest drains on battery life in mobile devices. A more efficient SOC is not going to do anything to change that
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What if the LTE electronics is on the SoC?
Doesn't matter. The big drain is powering the radios. It takes juice to transmit signals strongly enough that distant towers can pick them up, and to boost weak incoming signals. More efficient local processing doesn't make a significant difference.
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tldr: sorry, good intentions but you're wrong, I'm right, etc.
The way the main SOC (ie the snapdragon SOC) decides to power devices on/off (such as radio) and the efficiency of their regulators does change battery life significantly though when the device is not under active use.
But in addition to that, the way the SOC manages it's own cores, and the way the core are built very significantly changes battery life under active use.
But you don't have to believe me, because Samsung builds the SAME phone with 2
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Even Apple phones don't drain that quickly. Mine is 3+ years old and still holds a good 8h of "active" time (regularly checking mails, a few phone calls), it used to be two full days when I purchased it although my activity has increased.
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Trust me when I say this, Apple iPhones aren't all that special. Given the "Ingress" test is the most brutal of "Performance" testing, iPhones do not perform all that much better than similarly equipped Android phones.
The iPhone people I know do not spend significant amounts of time on screen, except when watching movies.
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In most cases that I've seen, the person forgets to charge it overnight, and then needs the phone to navigate to a new address when traveling, and check in on emails periodically. Typically if you can get the phone to 50% you can nurse it the rest of the day, or at least until you can plug it in periodically throughout the day to get you back up above ~30%
Quick Charge? (Score:2)
Maybe they could sell their technology to Tesla, Nissan, Chevrolet, etc.
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Right, because scale isn't relevant here.
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Well, clearly it isn't, since 15 minutes will charge any phone to half, no matter the battery, or usage during those 15 minutes.
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Well the differences between cell phones is probably only a factor of 4.
A Tesla battery is a factor of 8000.
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A phone battery is 1S lipo/lion of about 3000mah/12Wh. At 1C (3A) it takes 1h to charge. At 4C it takes 15min. So Qcom charges at 4C or 12A.
A Tesla car battery is 27777777mah/85-100kWh. At 1C it is 27777A. thats.. thats a lot of energy.
A small household uses about 100A/day (fridge, oven, burns, heating, tv, etc. Rough estimate). So you'd have to charge, in 15min as much energy as the household would spend in 277 days. That should give an idea of how much more energy is stored in a Tesla car battery vs a sma
Re: Quick Charge? (Score:1)
Do you do units ? What do mah and A/day mean ?
27% better performance? (Score:2)
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the SE is just a little bigger than the 4S and is basically an iphone 6S with no force touch and a smaller screen
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Quick Charge? (Score:2)
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I would settle for a phone that didn't explode!
Can it be? (Score:2)
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I would settle for a phone that didn't explode!
So buy literally any phone on the market?
First to announce a 10nm SoC (Score:1)
Qualcomm is the first to announce a 10nm SoC, but there are in fact several 10nm SoC's currently in production.
There's Samsung's Exynos and MediaTek's Helio X30 and Apple's A10x which will appear in the new iPad, all due out in first half of 2017.
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"Real" 10nm would be where the gate length is 10nm. For that definition Intel's 10nm isn't real 10nm either.
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Not really, there are a bunch of different pieces you can look at.
It's all marketing. The only thing that matters is price and performance (and dependencies on those things like yield).
Quick Charge 4 (Score:1)
The standard Google said is dangerous, and likely causing phones to catch fire.
Oh, the chip's made by Samsung, well, there you go, explosive news.
Quick Charge? Hope they fixed it. (Score:2)
Wasn't that the major problem with the Note 7 catching fire? Overheating the battery during a "quick charge" causing damage then poof, phone up in smoke?
Intel??? (Score:1)
This article is about Qualcomm. Why on earth is Slashdot using the Intel logo?
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You did know that Intel was the first semiconductor manufacturer to lie about feature size, right?
Wow 10nm... almost at the theoretical limit of 7nm (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow, this is just unbelievable. A 10nm die. It is so amazing how far we have come in just 30 years. I am truly impressed and amazed that we can carry around a 2Ghz Quad core in our pocket that is a fully functional computer. It is truly impressive, congratulations everyone!
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Compared to that I have a super computer in my pocket, lets not even bother comparing it to my gaming rig at home.
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27% faster OR 40% less power (Score:2)
From TFA:
Samsung’s new 10nm FinFET process, for instance, allows up to a 30 percent increase in area efficiency with a 27 percent improvement in performance or up to 40 percent less power consumption compared to the previous version.
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And I would prefer 100% less fire.
Intel (Score:2)
I know Intel would like to buy Qualcom but, as far as I know, this hasn't happened yet.