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Qualcomm's New Snapdragon 888 Processor Will Power the Android Flagships of 2021 (theverge.com) 35

Qualcomm has officially announced the Snapdragon 888 at its Snapdragon Tech Summit, offering a first look at its next-generation flagship smartphone processor. The 888 will power the next wave of 2021 Android flagships from companies like Samsung, OnePlus, LG, Sony, and more. From a report: In a first for the company's top-of-the-line 8-series chipsets, the Snapdragon 888 is making a big improvement for 5G: it'll finally offer a fully integrated 5G modem, unlike last year's Snapdragon 865 (which required that manufacturers include a separate modem chip inside the cramped interior of a modern smartphone).

The Snapdragon 888 will feature Qualcomm's X60 modem, announced earlier this year, which jumps to a 5nm process for better power efficiency and improvements for 5G carrier aggregation across the mmWave and sub-6GHz bands of the spectrum. Between the new 5nm architecture and the power efficiency gains from an integrated modem, the new chip looks to offer some substantial battery improvements when it comes to 5G. In addition to the 5G improvements, Qualcomm also teased several other advances coming to the Snapdragon 888, including the company's sixth-gen AI Engine (running on a "redesigned" Qualcomm Hexagon processor), which promises a big jump in performance and power efficiency for AI tasks.

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Qualcomm's New Snapdragon 888 Processor Will Power the Android Flagships of 2021

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  • I thought I read in the article that Samsung isn't making any new flagship phones (theirs was the Note?)....

    What other flagship phones for Android are out there that would get such a chip?

    As you can tell, I'm not terribly familiar with Android offerings, but I have a couple of friends that are and would like to pass the info on.

    • Samsung makes so many variants that the waters are really muddy when it comes to the "flagship" label. The Note line was their ultra-high-end priced product and it is being replaced with their foldable line as it is very difficult nowdays to differentiate the Note from everything else, even in their own lineup. You can expect quite a few products in their lineup to use this chip, especially since using last years chip which has a separate modem is not likely to offer the cost savings it usually does.
    • by aitikin ( 909209 )

      I thought I read in the article that Samsung isn't making any new flagship phones (theirs was the Note?)....

      What other flagship phones for Android are out there that would get such a chip?

      As you can tell, I'm not terribly familiar with Android offerings, but I have a couple of friends that are and would like to pass the info on.

      From the summary you're referencing [slashdot.org]

      At present, the South Korean tech giant does not have plans to develop a new version of the Galaxy Note for 2021, three sources said, declining to be identified as the plans were not public. Instead, the Galaxy S series' top model, the S21, will have a stylus and the next version of Samsung's foldable phone will be compatible with a stylus, which will be sold separately, one of the sources said.

      But as Dorianny points out, it'll likely be in a number of their "mid-tier" ph

    • Skimming ThatFA seems that they won't be making it for the next year and anyway the higher tier S2x will be with a pen and the fold as well. Plenty of phones in 4-digit US/EURO territory, no worries, if there's anything shiny to add anywhere there will be plenty of models to chose from. Their line made no sense even before the pandemic but now releasing every year tons of "high end" (or at least stratospherically priced) phones doesn't make any sense.

    • What other flagship phones for Android are out there that would get such a chip?

      Probably a lot, but it's too early for that. Surely Android Authority or Android Police will have something about that in the coming months.
      The Verge obviously is kind of a useless sort for that sort of thing.

    • by segin ( 883667 )

      You know there's more than Samsung for Android manufacturers, yes? The list of manufacturers is HUGE.

      Ever heard of LG, Sony, or Motorola?

      • by Xenx ( 2211586 ) on Tuesday December 01, 2020 @04:37PM (#60783516)
        You picked three terrible examples. Motorola only produces mid-range devices. I'm not knocking them, just a bad example. Sony and LG are both having trouble staying relevant with Android. I'm not saying they won't make a phone with the new SOC, but they're largely irrelevant. Sony is doing it to themselves, they are following HTC in what not to do if you want to keep making phone. I don't know what happened with LG exactly, I just know that they started falling behind in mindshare. They're also making more niche designs lately. More power to them, but hopefully they find one that sticks.

        Oppo, Oneplus, Xiaomi... those would be relevant examples of alternative flagship brands in todays market. Even then, only Samsung really holds any mindshare in the US market. You go to a carrier, like most Americans do, and you'll see Samsung as the only real flagship. Then, you'll have Google and the rest with all the mid-range devices. Now, those midrange devices are all great. They're just not flagships.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The US market isn't where the action is any more because it's saturated and sales are down. Manufacturers are more interested in growth markets.

          • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
            That is largely irrelevant to what I was saying. Samsung is still by far the top manufacturer globally as well. It's just that outside the US, it's more normal to buy your phone independent from your carrier.
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              You were saying LG are losing mindshare and that Xiaomi etc. don't have flagships. They do, just not in the US.

              • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
                I did say LG is losing mindshare, because it is. As for Xiaomi, I said they are an example of a flagship. I didn't specify it was due to their global presence, but it's what I was implying. I just also pointed out that within the US Samsung is nearly synonymous with flagship for Android. Those other flagship phones are a niche market.
  • Hexagon processor? Sounds cool! Haven't worked on packing problems before, I wonder, would it make better use of a circular wafer surface vs a rectangular processor? :D

    • Qualcomm Hexagon processor is a proprietary 32-bit DSP and not really related to real hexagons in any way. BORING

    • Sounds like a dumb question at first, but when you think about the fact that silicon wafers are round, I'm beginning to wonder... Surely there's an online tool that could easily compute that.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Sounds like a dumb question at first, but when you think about the fact that silicon wafers are round, I'm beginning to wonder... Surely there's an online tool that could easily compute that.

        Most chips aren't square or rectangular because hexagons were too hard to pack on a round substrate - if hexagons worked well, it would've been done already.

        The real reason is that hexagons work if you're packing the wafer with the same die of the same size, but that's only in a few things. Many wafers are multi die waf

    • Cutting hexagonal dies out of the wafer is the hard part.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • For these stupid things. Now, I can open twitter, Poke'mon before I even think I need to!

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