The history of the Snapdragon 800-series

This is the history of Qualcomm’s flagship chipsets!
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Qualcomm has been at the top of the smartphone chipset game for years. It has built a reputation for creating fast, powerful system on chips with fantastic connectivity capabilities. Today, we’re taking a look at the history of the flagship chipset series to see how it’s progressed.

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#Qualcomm #Snapdragon #Snapdragon888

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30 thoughts on “The history of the Snapdragon 800-series

  1. Hey guys. Apologies for the confusing edit. The Snapdragon 870 and 888 pages are switched. To find the correct tables, please see the article (link in the video description).

  2. @0:18 It is the top of the line series, that way you take the Snapdragon 860 or 870 which are more akin to flagship killer SOCs than flagship SOCs.
    @1:54 More likely, single core performance was more important back then.

  3. The S4 plus wasn't the successor to the S4 as we see it today. In fact there was no single S4 chip and rather this was the name of the familly of products. There was the mid tier S4 play then the mid/high tier S4 plus and the absolute flagship S4 pro which was a quad core. Other two were dual cores. I remember the S4 pro was crazy hot. Optimus G with this chip was turning down the brightness all the time to stop the phone from overheating. It was really annoying and that's why i disable this option. One day i forgot to turn down the brightness manually and started playing GTA San Andreas. After around 15 minuts phone started to smell weirdly…

  4. Had any OEMs effectively used the three ISP hardware for the cameras? I've not seen any OEMs including the OnePlus mention anything about these 3 ISP thing during the launch

  5. I wonder how soon if ever we will see Qualcomm's Snapdragon with Nuvia designs. Maybe we move to 2x Nuvia Phoenix Cores + 2 X ARM Cortex A79 Cores + 4x Cortex A55. Nuvia should help them compete better with Apple. Also Qualcomm is one of the partners Intel mentioned that will be taking advantage IDM 2.0. We could see SOCs fabricated at both TSMC and Intel.

  6. All these nifty features keeps you addicted to your smartphone/spy device; part of this processing power is used to track your activities with increasingly more accuracy, unbeknownst to most users.

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