Read more.But the 1.9GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 version is pretty nippy.
Read more.But the 1.9GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 version is pretty nippy.
I enjoy seeing the iPhone have such sucky scores compared to other phones of lesser price.
However I was looking forward to experiencing an 8 core phone
Current specs:
CPU: Intel i5 3570k Overclocked @ 4.6Ghz GPU: MSI Twin Frozr 7850 @ 1000Mhz Cooler: Arctic Cooling Freezer 13 RAM: 16Gb Corsair Vengeance 1600Mhz
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA Z77X-D3H
More "placebo tech effect".....I want 8 cores...duuno why, but it's a bigger number so has to be better :-)
Waiting for the cries of "We're being ripped off, so unfair, etc :-)"
placing bets that `octo core` wont get LTE....
I want LTE more than I want 8 cores.
Totally agree. To be honest i think Samsung have got this spot on really. the UK are all about performance lines and i think the 1.9Ghz quad will top the benches. Snappers are great cores. The Octo is most likely not going to be a true 8 core device, but a 4 and 4. It will use the lower four for normal everyday stuff and trigger the more powerful cores only for bigger tasks. in fact i'd go out on a limb and say the us version wont beat the HTC one. place your bets....
I want:
S4 internals in a HTC One chassis!
WITH MiSD slot!
(I can live without having a replaceable battery as it's 2300mAh is good enough for me)
;-P
Whats stopping me buying this phone off ebay from a US phone importer? I do all the time with cameras, tablets and my current phone. Only issue is I need a UK plug converter.
The US version uses the Qualcomm SoC too.
It could be capacity related i.e. Samsung might not be capable of producing every phone with an Exynos, and/or ensuring redundancy. I'm also wondering if the Exynos version will lack LTE though, but it would be a bit strange considering Korea and Japan aren't included in the Snapdragon markets?
Performance/battery life comparisons should be interesting.
Last edited by watercooled; 21-03-2013 at 01:01 PM.
Meh - The 'octo core' has technically got 8 cores but they're not all the same, so probably no big deal.
Ignoring the 4 low power cores (as surely the SD 600 will downclock/turn off cores in low power mode anyway so do we know if battery life/performance in a low power state is even going to be different between the 2 versions?..) are the 4 x snapdragon 600s @ 1.9Ghz going to be hugely slower than the 4 x 1.6Ghz Exynos ? quick google shows no definitive benchies other than exynos quad vs snapdraon but no low power core comparison.
Oh and 2 other things...
1) iPhone insult in the first reply, wow, that's original and relevant to the article.
2) It is pronounced 'theytukuurrjerrrrbs'
Last edited by Rob_B; 21-03-2013 at 01:07 PM.
What?
This is somewhat outdated already.
http://www.pocket-lint.com/news/5051...ssor-countries
The UK could still see the octocore device.
So why can't Samsung serve all markets with Octa when they can with other Exynos chips (i.e. Note II is LTE capable and uses Exynos in UK doesn't it?). Surely it can't be fab capacity? This is Samsung after all, they've surely got enough fab capacity to churn out their own chips, and surely that's better than buying them in from Qualcomm.
Seems like a bit of a fail really that they can't manage a phone with just the one type of CPU in all markets, especially when that CPU is one of the headline features.
Edit: The Octa SKUs don't do LTE? Can't Samsung make LTE work with their latest and greatest CPU? That seems also a bit of a fail.
SGX544MP3 >>>>> Adreno 320
The CPU in the Snapdragon 600 may be faster than the iphone 5's, but the GPU is not.
I wouldn't mind so much getting the Snapdragon 600 if it was paired with the 544MP3.
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