
I'm here to the Qualcomm's Uplinq Conference and you know that the company is touting its Snapdragon processor. Senior VP Rob Chandhok was enough confidence to say that dual-core Snapdragon processor the company could exceed that quad-core A9 processors of competitors.
In an interview with large-scale, Chandhok mentions competition by name, but he extolled the virtues of the asynchronous architecture of the business of its Snapdragon dual-core processor and said that this type of design will provide better performance without taking a huge success on the life of the battery. Without getting too technical, this allows the phones or the tablets to amp each heart as required - using not each core for each process, this could save the battery without compromising performance, Qualcomm, said.
This architecture will be particularly useful when the company moves in the space of quad-core processing, which is to come. Chandhok says that competition does not this primarily because it is more difficult to do, especially when you produce many other components of connectivity in a mobile device such as Qualcomm.
The company is not disturbed by people as NVIDIA already to have there quad-core chips because Chandhok says that Qualcomm loves make sure that there are products that make a certain way and made right. This includes high performance, but also make the priority of the because battery life that consumers are concerned about the power their phone or Tablet is if she dies in two hours.
Course, Qualcomm fuels also 4 G LTE devices such as lightning and LG revolution and they have horrible battery life. Chandhok says it is just a by-product of using the first generation of modem technology and future devices will 4 G LTE modems that are more deeply integrated in the system, which will reduce battery consumption. As any new technology, 4 G LTE will take a little time for carriers, makers of the chip and handset makers to optimize.
When first Netflix for Android landed on only antirrhinum majus devices, I was very concerned that we may be entering a new era of fragmentation of hardware - the chip makers could sign exclusive agreements with companies to ensure that only certain phones could receive some applications. One thing I was very pleased to hear Chandhok said is that Qualcomm is not interested in causing fragmentation for consumers. For example, his game Pack featuring the games that have better performance on combined Snapdragon but they will be also available on other types of devices.