[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:36fn88rj said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":36fn88rj]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520089#p31520089:dcnu0gkz said:haar[/url]":dcnu0gkz]...max speed of 2.4Ghz. (it is a lie!, lol)
Great... screwup the wi-fi band while you are at it...
(or encase the phone in shielding so the phone weighs a "ton"...)
good luck it getting an FCC cert.
(Surprise... when being tested, it will never hit 2.4Ghz, more like 2.2Ghz.)
Wonder why the ipad pro a9x is limited to 2.2 Ghz? ,
also why intel/amd processor are never rated for 2.4Ghz (always above or below)
it is because of the RFI problem...
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:cdee1juc said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":cdee1juc]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520211#p31520211:1vtyvg57 said:ikjadoon[/url]":1vtyvg57]What is the voltage increase? Like, is this just simple binning that took Qualcomm a weekend (a la i5-6600K / i7-6700k)?
Sounds like a slight hit for battery life.
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520283#p31520283:lis0avym said:earthlingkc[/url]":lis0avym]Yeah, this doesn't sound like smaller fabrication, so likely more heat and more power consumption. But if it is smaller fab, then a fist bump to Qualcomm.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520283#p31520283:7a702vq2 said:earthlingkc[/url]":7a702vq2]Yeah, this doesn't sound like smaller fabrication, so likely more heat and more power consumption. But if it is smaller fab, then a fist bump to Qualcomm.
There's no word on whether the 821's two slower cores in the CPU will be faster than the 1.6GHz in the current chip.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520605#p31520605:k2wet752 said:theoilman[/url]":k2wet752]Isn't clock speed just determined by firmware/software? I didn't think you needed new hardware just for clock speed, or is there some kind of optimization for higher clock speed in the silicon here?
Gotcha. So we need to put freon in our phones[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520709#p31520709:16a35d6x said:Edward351[/url]":16a35d6x][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520605#p31520605:16a35d6x said:theoilman[/url]":16a35d6x]Isn't clock speed just determined by firmware/software? I didn't think you needed new hardware just for clock speed, or is there some kind of optimization for higher clock speed in the silicon here?
Clock speed is related to heat output and efficiency. You usually increase the clock speed by increasing the voltage and power in a chip. But there is a hard limit when the voltage is too high and the power leaks causing the chip to fail. Separate from that, higher clock speed means more work, more work needs more power, more power means more heat.
While the earlier chips could potentially hit the speeds the newer ones could, they couldn't do it in the efficiency and power envelopes the newer ones can. These are the same reasons you see liquid or Freon cooled PCs that hit 5GHz and higher. you need dramatic cooling to overcome the power and heat requirements to get the chips to hit those high frequencies.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520723#p31520723:15ug8iu0 said:theoilman[/url]":15ug8iu0]Gotcha. So we need to put freon in our phones[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520709#p31520709:15ug8iu0 said:Edward351[/url]":15ug8iu0][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520605#p31520605:15ug8iu0 said:theoilman[/url]":15ug8iu0]Isn't clock speed just determined by firmware/software? I didn't think you needed new hardware just for clock speed, or is there some kind of optimization for higher clock speed in the silicon here?
Clock speed is related to heat output and efficiency. You usually increase the clock speed by increasing the voltage and power in a chip. But there is a hard limit when the voltage is too high and the power leaks causing the chip to fail. Separate from that, higher clock speed means more work, more work needs more power, more power means more heat.
While the earlier chips could potentially hit the speeds the newer ones could, they couldn't do it in the efficiency and power envelopes the newer ones can. These are the same reasons you see liquid or Freon cooled PCs that hit 5GHz and higher. you need dramatic cooling to overcome the power and heat requirements to get the chips to hit those high frequencies.![]()
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:3ix1kzk9 said:laststop311[/url]":3ix1kzk9][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:3ix1kzk9 said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":3ix1kzk9]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
I think at this juncture it's silly to think using phones for vr will be anything more than a novelty.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520929#p31520929:6373azf0 said:ssiu[/url]":6373azf0][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:6373azf0 said:laststop311[/url]":6373azf0][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:6373azf0 said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":6373azf0]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
The mobile VR stuff needs high sustained performance. For example, Google said the Nexus 6P can be used for Daydream VR development, but "Caution: The 6P's thermal performance is not representative of the consumer Daydream-ready devices that will be launching later this year. In particular, expect the 6P to thermally throttle CPU and GPU performance after a short period of use, depending on workload."
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:3nz5crz2 said:laststop311[/url]":3nz5crz2][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:3nz5crz2 said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":3nz5crz2]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
[url=http://arstechnica.co.uk/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31522073#p31522073:26pg5cwe said:shadedmagus[/url]":26pg5cwe]Has anyone looked at whether phone cases negate the cooling improvements the new chips and shell designs bring to the table? I suspect they do, but I'd hate to carry the phone around without one - I tend to drop them often, and my cases having a raised bezel have saved the screen more times than I care to recount.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520605#p31520605:375570hx said:theoilman[/url]":375570hx]Isn't clock speed just determined by firmware/software? I didn't think you needed new hardware just for clock speed, or is there some kind of optimization for higher clock speed in the silicon here?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519963#p31519963:1s9jipem said:Demento[/url]":1s9jipem]Yeah, my exact thought was "We're seeing the new Nexus". The past couple had to use the same SoCs as the spring releases before them. The original Nexus 5 got the boost of using the 800 when most of that year's phones were on the Snapdragon 600, so we can have high hopes for this one indeed.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520237#p31520237:3if0ugji said:laststop311[/url]":3if0ugji][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520211#p31520211:3if0ugji said:ikjadoon[/url]":3if0ugji]What is the voltage increase? Like, is this just simple binning that took Qualcomm a weekend (a la i5-6600K / i7-6700k)?
Sounds like a slight hit for battery life.
The tiny extra energy that it may use is more than made up by getting back into idle mode. The extra time in idle mode more than makes up for the minute amount of energy used clocking higher.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:11ntsijp said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":11ntsijp]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:1lgnpqeg said:laststop311[/url]":1lgnpqeg][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:1lgnpqeg said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":1lgnpqeg]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31521011#p31521011:cwbtkfxd said:theoilman[/url]":cwbtkfxd]I think at this juncture it's silly to think using phones for vr will be anything more than a novelty.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520929#p31520929:cwbtkfxd said:ssiu[/url]":cwbtkfxd][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:cwbtkfxd said:laststop311[/url]":cwbtkfxd][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:cwbtkfxd said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":cwbtkfxd]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
The mobile VR stuff needs high sustained performance. For example, Google said the Nexus 6P can be used for Daydream VR development, but "Caution: The 6P's thermal performance is not representative of the consumer Daydream-ready devices that will be launching later this year. In particular, expect the 6P to thermally throttle CPU and GPU performance after a short period of use, depending on workload."
Price is only one of many issues. Power, heat regulation, and battery life imo tip the scales for vr failing in mobile for everything but the occasional interactive video, at least for the foreseeable future.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31531743#p31531743:33hp11ud said:AreWeThereYeti[/url]":33hp11ud][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31521011#p31521011:33hp11ud said:theoilman[/url]":33hp11ud]I think at this juncture it's silly to think using phones for vr will be anything more than a novelty.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520929#p31520929:33hp11ud said:ssiu[/url]":33hp11ud][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:33hp11ud said:laststop311[/url]":33hp11ud][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:33hp11ud said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":33hp11ud]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
The mobile VR stuff needs high sustained performance. For example, Google said the Nexus 6P can be used for Daydream VR development, but "Caution: The 6P's thermal performance is not representative of the consumer Daydream-ready devices that will be launching later this year. In particular, expect the 6P to thermally throttle CPU and GPU performance after a short period of use, depending on workload."
On the contrary. Several reasons. First, buying a $100 accessory to a phone you already need is a much lower bar to clear for consumers, and so you will naturally simply see a lot more buying at that much lower price point.
Secondly, lots of people (me included) are waiting out this generation of high-end VR, waiting for 4K. This gives people like me a nice holding pattern (and for media consumption in VR, the phones are actually better VR platforms than the Rift and Vive).
Finally, you overlook the fact that the biggest single VR market and user base right now is the Gear VR, not the Rift or Vive. More people are getting turned on to VR by a phone than any other way. It's a great gateway drug.
edit: forgot cardboard, which is probably the largest user base, but I don't consider that proper VR yet, without low-latency modes and decent gyroscopes. But that will change.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520595#p31520595:2w7gnod5 said:Kerome[/url]":2w7gnod5]Will be interesting to see how it compares to Apple's updated chips for the iPhone 7 in September. 10% speed bump is not a lot compared to Apple's consistent gains of 60-70% year on year for the last few years.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31532161#p31532161:19tvd6lz said:theoilman[/url]":19tvd6lz]Price is only one of many issues. Power, heat regulation, and battery life imo tip the scales for vr failing in mobile for everything but the occasional interactive video, at least for the foreseeable future.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31531743#p31531743:19tvd6lz said:AreWeThereYeti[/url]":19tvd6lz][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31521011#p31521011:19tvd6lz said:theoilman[/url]":19tvd6lz]I think at this juncture it's silly to think using phones for vr will be anything more than a novelty.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520929#p31520929:19tvd6lz said:ssiu[/url]":19tvd6lz][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31520219#p31520219:19tvd6lz said:laststop311[/url]":19tvd6lz][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31519933#p31519933:19tvd6lz said:fuzzyfuzzyfungus[/url]":19tvd6lz]Any word on whether this includes any sort of process or packaging improvements, or should we expect the 821 to throttle to the same sub-820 clock speeds that the 820s in current devices tend to if you actually stress them?
(edit: just in case that came off sounding unduly negative: I don't think that the 820 is a bad chip by any means; it's just that, like most of its competitors, the advertised clock speed is effectively 'burst mode' and very few handset designs actually have the cooling to deliver that for any length of time. Throttling is a perfectly sensible response to thermal limits; but it makes paying extra for a slightly higher peak clock and then throttling down to basically the same speed as the last generation pretty unexciting, so I'd hope that the 821 either does have thermal improvements or is priced more or less exactly as the 820 was.)
What programs are you using on your phone that keep the cpu stressed long enough to throttle? Every workload I have on my phone is extremely bursty. The higher boost clock means the cpu can finish it's bursty task faster and "race" back to sleep faster. Sooner the cpu gets into idle mode the more energy is saved. So this cpu could easily be more efficient if it can do the same tasks but get back into idle mode faster. I have never noticed any thermal throttling using the youtube app, spotify app, or browse web on chrome. The cpu doesn't stay stressed long enough to throttle. Nobody really uses any programs that stress the cpu for longer than 20-30 seconds i don't think.
The mobile VR stuff needs high sustained performance. For example, Google said the Nexus 6P can be used for Daydream VR development, but "Caution: The 6P's thermal performance is not representative of the consumer Daydream-ready devices that will be launching later this year. In particular, expect the 6P to thermally throttle CPU and GPU performance after a short period of use, depending on workload."
On the contrary. Several reasons. First, buying a $100 accessory to a phone you already need is a much lower bar to clear for consumers, and so you will naturally simply see a lot more buying at that much lower price point.
Secondly, lots of people (me included) are waiting out this generation of high-end VR, waiting for 4K. This gives people like me a nice holding pattern (and for media consumption in VR, the phones are actually better VR platforms than the Rift and Vive).
Finally, you overlook the fact that the biggest single VR market and user base right now is the Gear VR, not the Rift or Vive. More people are getting turned on to VR by a phone than any other way. It's a great gateway drug.
edit: forgot cardboard, which is probably the largest user base, but I don't consider that proper VR yet, without low-latency modes and decent gyroscopes. But that will change.