• DdCno1
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    4313 days ago

    Both reported numbers that were nowhere close to what Qualcomm promised. How not close? Above 50% this time but one used the term “Celeron” to describe performance.

    There is no harsher way to describe the performance of a CPU. Ouch.

  • @TheGrandNagus
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    2413 days ago

    I remember saying months ago that Qualcomm’s offerings often look excellent in synthetic workloads but fall apart in real-world usecases, and I got downvoted to oblivion and called an x86 shill for it.

    I never found it likely that Qualcomm would be able to compete with AMD, Apple, or even Intel in the short term.

  • @[email protected]
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    2113 days ago

    Wow, how disappointing. One of the quotes say they got less than half as much performance as was promised, I’m hoping it’s a driver issue and not just outright scam marketing.

    • @RubberElectrons
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      713 days ago

      Yeah, it sounds like Qualcomm is driving straight at a cliff’s edge in terms of their reputation…

      • Max-P
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        913 days ago

        That’s fine, the stock is up this quarter with all the hype, they’ll deal with the next quarter when it comes.

        This reeks of “make a chip better than Apple’s or y’all are fired” and the ensuing lies throughout the company about the actual performance of the chip to appease management.

        • @RubberElectrons
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          313 days ago

          Spot on. What a terrible thing our company incentives have devolved into.

      • @[email protected]
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        313 days ago

        We must wait until the dust settles and real products are released. Then, and only then, can we be certain. But it does not look promising.

  • @Dragomus
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    1813 days ago

    If this is true it will be devastating for Qualcomm … they hyped the new chips big time, and some huge manufacturers happily announced products with the new chip. So if this falls flat, a few influential players will not be happy at all…

    Not to mention the rest of the tech media… they will happily sell the pitchforks and torches.

  • @RubberElectrons
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    1313 days ago

    I really can’t imagine this going well for Qualcomm, if the article is true.

    It smells like there’s a lot of smoke around their implementation of the benchmarks, and consumers will immediately discover the fire when the time arrives and devices are in-hand.

  • mihies
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    12 days ago

    I don’t think Qualcomm can outperform Apple at CPU game out of the blue. They were always trailing behind and Apple has now three generations of M CPUs behind. It’d be nice, though.

    Edit: fixed stupid typo - can’t outperform -> can outperform

    • zelifcam
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      213 days ago

      deleted by creator

  • @[email protected]
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    913 days ago

    Damn it man. I want arm laptops to be good. I can’t justify buying anything apple even with Asahi as good as it is now.

  • @[email protected]
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    413 days ago

    Apple arm chips still have good days ahead of it. It’s been years since the MacBook m1 was released, how can competition not catch up already ?

  • oo1
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    113 days ago

    I’m not sure i rate this particular article.
    They seem to sort of hint at the importance of power and energy efficiency
    But why did they then “ask about TDP” ? Surely they they need to know the actual input power(or energy) to achieve the benchmark, not TDP which is itself a wierd thing for chips that self regulate temperature by throttling.

    I’m not inclined to pay attention to this journo.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 days ago

      Power draw is heavily varied from fraction of a second to fraction of a second. TDP is more or less the target for average power draw over a longer period of time, and probably more importantly, something you’re more likely to get a representative to answer. They’re probably not going to give you the peak momentary power draw because it doesn’t mean anything, and they probably won’t give you average either. TDP is as much as you’re likely to get.