Read more.Do you fancy having "Ultra Low Power, High Performance Graphics," in your next mobile?
Read more.Do you fancy having "Ultra Low Power, High Performance Graphics," in your next mobile?
Interesting development. Perhaps Samsung will drop Qualcomm in forthcoming phones now
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
Well they figured out that the advancement of cpu core speed are slowing down and leveling out.
BUT as in PC the GPU makes massive advancements in performance each couple of years.
In the mobile market there is a lot of head room for advancement in the GPU so to differentiate it self from the competition with it's flag ships in a few years they need new GPU tech to take the performance crown.
GPU, not CPU.
This could mean big moolah for AMD, think about it; edging out the Adreno and Mali GPUs currently plaguing the Exynos/Snapdragon war with their differences? You could do away with all that by homogenising the GPU front end.
Because whether we like it/agree with it or not, mobile gaming does not seem to be going away.
I forget the specific communications tech, but basically there is something that only America uses and Qualcomm has the rights to it, so if you want to launch a phone in the US you literally have no choice, but to use Qualcomm.
Most people have no idea just how scummy Qualcomm are, they've been sued by pretty much everyone, including the FTC for effectively running a monopoly and using shady practises that would make intel blush.
chj (03-06-2019)
It isn't about rights, just that no-one else can afford to enter the market for those standards.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...most-20-years/
... but I don't see why "gift us your CPU related patent portfolio or we will destroy your workstation business" Intel would bat an eyelid (Intergraph vs Intel. Inter-who?? ... exactly )
This could be awesome. I currently despise the two phone set up Samsung has but I can absolutely see why they do it. Right now, if I buy a flagship Samsung, I am paying the same for "the same phone" but it isn't. It's slower, less efficient, has poorer camera processing and even the audio is far worse due to the poor signal processors in use. I think I remember that even the screens aren't quite as good even though the display hardware is the same, the signal processing hardware is different. For your average normie, none of this is an issue. For the picky and autistic Yorkshireman who wants his money's worth, it's a disaster.
Samsung have made pretty good progress since the S9 but if they can get some AMD IP and help that would be awesome. Even if it's mostly GPU, once you start a partnership like this it's tempting to expand it. Then you can consider whether that might lead to better x86 emulation or even.... licencing that allows SoCs that can natively run x86. Just imagine if they combine the experience Samsung have working with low power ARM IP and instead switch to AMD CPU IP....
I'll admit the opiates have really hit me hard today and I'm quite high but I'm also quite excited to see what this brings. Always-on laptops with a half decent mobile GPU, all day battery life AND native x86?
amd should thank Hector for this. I know amd is the popular game right now, but the fact is, that jerky company fired hector for buying ati many years ago, they gave him rubbishrubbishrubbishrubbish for doing that, when he knew and said LONG Term amd needed ati graphics. so, he made the bold move, and the short sighted bean counters and other "executives" fired hector for such a costly buy. now, years later lisa reaps the rewards for hectors bold move? just because of that, ill never buy amd again, plus i dont like that amd are and have been money infused by filth.
(edit, earlier post misread). The article is kind of about rights - licensing conditions set by qualcomm making it hard for companies to offer phones with qualcomm chips if they also produce ones without. That doesn't stop some all non-qualcomm entries though I presume.
Would you call that "rights"? Qualcomm don't have any fundamental exclusivity to that technology, they just tied everyone up in contractual knots. So anyone can enter the market with a new design, just no-one will buy it.
5G could change all that. Samsung have their own 5G modem so don't need Qualcomm for that, they have their own ARM architectural license and CPU design so they don't need Qualcomm for that. Maybe that is what this is all about long term; perhaps if Samsung had access to better graphics then they could produce a chip that could be sold to other companies and break the Qualcomm monopoly. If Qualcomm have generated the amount of distrust that it sounds like they have, then going to a component supplier like Samsung (who already supply screens, ram and flash) could look really interesting.
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