All the copies are ready to be shipped as soon as they're discovered at Raxxla.
Half Life 3 confirmed
I'll mention it here, too, for Ron et al:
Why no coverage yet of Qualcomm's purchase of Nuvia? Nuvia is founded by and run by former Apple architects that contributed to several generations of Apple's custom silicon performance gains, and they claim they can beat even Apple's designs on both performance and power characteristics. Qualcomm buying them is a big story.
I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Anyone remembers that the Adreno line of GPUs used by Qualcomm is derived from ATi Mobile efforts, when struggling AMD had to sell the division to Qualcomm?
Has AMDs Gamer/AR/DataCenter/BigData/AI focused GPU division what it takes to do low power mobile GPUs again?
Only time will tell.
Edit: Nija'd by dean lubacki. I do not understand the downvotes...
Anyone remembers that the Adreno line of GPUs used by Qualcomm is derived from ATi Mobile efforts, when struggling AMD had to sell the division to Qualcomm?
Has AMDs Gamer/AR/DataCenter/BigData/AI focused GPU division what it takes to do low power mobile GPUs again?
Only time will tell.
Edit: Nija'd by dean lubacki. I do not understand the downvotes...
I assume that the downvotes were because these facts were already written in the article.
I always figured that the Exynos thing was used both as a fail safe to a single supply issue (e.g. what if Apple bought all of Qualcom's fab power for two years)? and as negotiation leverage with Qualcom (we can walk away from your terms if we have to). Both are legit reasons, but Exynos has rarely beat contemporary Qualcom SOCs in any category - let alone swept the board.
But I didn't realize that Samsung didn't use Exynos for its domestic phones in the last round of manufacturing. Given the Asian concept of "face" that's a bigger insult to the Exynos division (specifically it's leader) than most of us Westerners can comprehend.
I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
I mean, they did buy ARM. Technically nVidia's the other half of these chips. They don't really have to lean on Tegras anymore.I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Hopefully, far away. We dont need more of their tech that is strictly released to keep you locked in.
And given how they have burned every single company that made the mistake of working with them, I doubt others will try.
No worries, Nintendo will get its "reward" by working with Nvidia, its bound to happen.
I always figured that the Exynos thing was used both as a fail safe to a single supply issue (e.g. what if Apple bought all of Qualcom's fab power for two years)? and as negotiation leverage with Qualcom (we can walk away from your terms if we have to). Both are legit reasons, but Exynos has rarely beat contemporary Qualcom SOCs in any category - let alone swept the board.
But I didn't realize that Samsung didn't use Exynos for its domestic phones in the last round of manufacturing. Given the Asian concept of "face" that's a bigger insult to the Exynos division (specifically it's leader) than most of us Westerners can comprehend.
It's a bit worse than losing face...
Generally Samsung uses Exynos for South Korea.
The use of Snapdragon 865 instead of Exynos 990 for South Korea is an exception.
Generally the driver of Samsung's use of Qualcomm's Snapdragon vs Exynos is the support of CDMA2000.
Qualcomm's licensing terms for CDMA2000 make it poor business for everyone else to develop SoC/modems for CDMA2000 and thus everyone tends to use Qualcomm for markets where CDMA2000 is important.
South Korea does not use CDMA2000 but China does so support for CDMA2000 may be important for some South Koreans who travel to China.
But there's another issue compounding.
The last few generations of Exynos flagship SoCs have used Mongoose CPU cores independently developed by Samsung.
Those CPU cores seem to be subpar offering worse performance/power than the mildly-modified ARM designs found in Qualcomm's chips and everyone-else-not-Apple.
That effort has been canceled with the Exynos 2100 mentioned in the article going back to all ARM designed cores.
Educated guess is that the worse power/performance and importance of China travel made Samsung sell the Qualcomm S20 in South Korea.
I mean, they did buy ARM. Technically nVidia's the other half of these chips. They don't really have to lean on Tegras anymore.I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Hopefully, far away. We dont need more of their tech that is strictly released to keep you locked in.
And given how they have burned every single company that made the mistake of working with them, I doubt others will try.
No worries, Nintendo will get its "reward" by working with Nvidia, its bound to happen.
I mean, they did buy ARM. Technically nVidia's the other half of these chips. They don't really have to lean on Tegras anymore.I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Hopefully, far away. We dont need more of their tech that is strictly released to keep you locked in.
And given how they have burned every single company that made the mistake of working with them, I doubt others will try.
No worries, Nintendo will get its "reward" by working with Nvidia, its bound to happen.
This is also the case for your neighbor to the north. Canada gets Qualcomm chips too on Samsung devices.Typically, the US, China, Japan, Latin America, and (lately) Korea get Qualcomm Snapdragon chips
I wonder when the rest of the world will move on from whatever tech Qualcomm is using to maintain their monopoly.
Exynos hasn't been great for a while now, but I'm really hoping that the recent developments in the ARM space spur Samsung to go back to semi-custom or even custom core designs. They would have the resources and a reason to push that forward.
I really want high performance ARM to not be the sole or primary province of Apple and Qualcomm, two companies I strongly dislike for different reasons. And before you say it: I know Qualcomm is currently running off-the-shelf ARM cores but my prediction is that they will go back to custom/semi-custom cores soon enough.
Exynos hasn't been great for a while now, but I'm really hoping that the recent developments in the ARM space spur Samsung to go back to semi-custom or even custom core designs. They would have the resources and a reason to push that forward.
I really want high performance ARM to not be the sole or primary province of Apple and Qualcomm, two companies I strongly dislike for different reasons. And before you say it: I know Qualcomm is currently running off-the-shelf ARM cores but my prediction is that they will go back to custom/semi-custom cores soon enough.
Qualcomm has tried and given up on in-house cores twice.
I'm not sure why you think they'll go back for a 3rd attempt at in-house cores any time soon.
Also Samsung is giving up on in-house cores. The Exynos 2100 will be their all-ARM core flagship SoC in a while dropping their in-house Mongoose cores.
So I wouldn't expect any new in-house cores from them anytime soon.
I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
RADEON vs ADRENO
THE LEGENDARY BATTLE BEGINS
Unless Android and their core apps are designed in tandem with a qualcomm chip, it's not going to change much.
It's all mostly irrelevant anyhow. Aside from a benchmark score, you will not notice the difference in everyday usage.
I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Notching up all those sweet, sweet, design wins with Tegra. And by design wins I mean "pretty much the Nintendo switch and some Nvidia-produced dev boards".
I'm not sure, but would be interested to know, if they are just more interested in reaping delicious CUDA margins than in knife fighting over SoC sales; if their weakness in cell modems(if memory serves they had a development effort that didn't go too much of anywhere and eventually got sold or back-burnered) is abject enough that they don't think it's worth it to try anymore; or if there is some other issue.
It's particularly interesting, to me, that (despite providing the chip for the original round of 'Windows RT' windows-on-arm devices) they are nowhere to be seen in Microsoft's windows-on-arm efforts, despite the fact that Nvidia windows GPU drivers are presumably in a much better state than Qualcomm windows GPU drivers; and there are also no Tegra chromebooks.
I continually wander where Nvidia is in all of this
Notching up all those sweet, sweet, design wins with Tegra. And by design wins I mean "pretty much the Nintendo switch and some Nvidia-produced dev boards".
I'm not sure, but would be interested to know, if they are just more interested in reaping delicious CUDA margins than in knife fighting over SoC sales; if their weakness in cell modems(if memory serves they had a development effort that didn't go too much of anywhere and eventually got sold or back-burnered) is abject enough that they don't think it's worth it to try anymore; or if there is some other issue.
It's particularly interesting, to me, that (despite providing the chip for the original round of 'Windows RT' windows-on-arm devices) they are nowhere to be seen in Microsoft's windows-on-arm efforts, despite the fact that Nvidia windows GPU drivers are presumably in a much better state than Qualcomm windows GPU drivers; and there are also no Tegra chromebooks.
I had a tablet with a Tegra chip in it. Support for that Tegra chip died immediately afterward so the tablet was forever trapped on the version of Android it shipped with. That was the last Tegra chip I bought. It was amazing that a company that supports GPUs well past the point where they're still relevant for gaming was the absolute worst at keeping their Android drivers up to date.
Unless Android and their core apps are designed in tandem with a qualcomm chip, it's not going to change much.
It's all mostly irrelevant anyhow. Aside from a benchmark score, you will not notice the difference in everyday usage.
I am more interested in how Qualcomm will fare against Apple Silicon in the PC realm though. I mean, Apple M1 is clearly nailing their entrance into the PC processor market (with some problem here and there, but overall, nails it). Something that SD 8cx and SD 8cx 2nd Gen (and it's derivative, SQ1 and SQ2) cannot.
Take the PR spin with a mound of salt, Nuvia has yet to demonstrate or prove much of anything. They are very young and have some brilliant minds so definitely don't underestimate them but raw talent =/= good products (just look at Intel). Im eagerly waiting for real results and wish them luck, especially in a world where pretty much every big player not named Apple or Huawei gave up on custom cores and increasingly rely on bog standard ARM licensed cores.I'll mention it here, too, for Ron et al:
Why no coverage yet of Qualcomm's purchase of Nuvia? Nuvia is founded by and run by former Apple architects that contributed to several generations of Apple's custom silicon performance gains, and they claim they can beat even Apple's designs on both performance and power characteristics. Qualcomm buying them is a big story.
Unless Android and their core apps are designed in tandem with a qualcomm chip, it's not going to change much.
It's all mostly irrelevant anyhow. Aside from a benchmark score, you will not notice the difference in everyday usage.
I am more interested in how Qualcomm will fare against Apple Silicon in the PC realm though. I mean, Apple M1 is clearly nailing their entrance into the PC processor market (with some problem here and there, but overall, nails it). Something that SD 8cx and SD 8cx 2nd Gen (and it's derivative, SQ1 and SQ2) cannot.
That last part just seems like a bald faced lie. Apps, heck basic websites, are getting more complex and heavier. Even on a brand new Galaxy Note 20 I drop frames while scrolling websites like Ars Technica for example.I'll mention it here, too, for Ron et al:
Why no coverage yet of Qualcomm's purchase of Nuvia? Nuvia is founded by and run by former Apple architects that contributed to several generations of Apple's custom silicon performance gains, and they claim they can beat even Apple's designs on both performance and power characteristics. Qualcomm buying them is a big story.
Unless Android and their core apps are designed in tandem with a qualcomm chip, it's not going to change much.
It's all mostly irrelevant anyhow. Aside from a benchmark score, you will not notice the difference in everyday usage.