Technology is a wonderful thing. It has actually given a new/different meaning to lots of things we used to know. Apple is not just a fruit. Blackberry isn’t either and same with chips. Tech companies may have gotten the inspiration from food in creating these world-changing innovations and it has forever changed the meaning of these things especially with smartphones. Who does not own a smartphone these days, right? Aside from not being cool, you miss out on a lot of things with a low-tech lifestyle. Social media and messaging apps are among the most popular features of these smartphones aside from popular games that forever erases the word boredom in your dictionary.
Smartphones also fuel your love for self-photography a.k.a. the taking of “selfies”. The latest smartphones often have high pixels and allow you to upload photos directly to your various social networking sites or even share to friends on messaging apps. High-tech mobile chips make all these things happen. It’s such a tiny object that holds just as much importance as any computer out there.
The Galaxy S8 may not be able to beat the iPhone 7 and iPhone 6s in speed tests, but it still delivers remarkable performance. The phone is the first one to offer users new 10nm chips from Qualcomm and Samsung, the same kind of chip technology that will be found in various other flagship handsets this year, including the iPhone 8. But chip manufacturing process is only part of the story. Sure the smaller chips get the more efficient and the faster they become, but these mobile chips are all based on ARM designs. So whenever ARM releases new chip designs, it’s good news for smartphone lovers.
ARM did exactly that at Computex — it announced a couple of new processors that are likely going to power next year’s phones, including the Galaxy S9 that Samsung is already working on.
These chips are the ARM Cortex-A75 that will likely be used by Qualcomm, Samsung, TSMC, and others to create flagship mobile chips, and the Cortex-A55 that will power many of the future mid-range handsets. Finally, there’s also a new Mali-G72 graphics processor for next year’s phones.
(Via: https://bgr.com/2017/05/29/galaxy-s9-snapdragon-845-chip/)
These new mobile chips spell the future. They aren’t just your typical chips that provide known features you already have in your mobile arsenal right now. You’ll now have a taste of augmented reality, machine learning, virtual reality, and artificial intelligence in the palms of your hand.
Back in March, ARM revealed a new technology called Dynamiq, which allows a combination of smaller, more power-efficient cores and larger, more powerful cores to be used on the same design. Previously, there needed to be an equal number of large and small cores. With a maximum of eight cores in a cluster, it’s now possible, for example, to have seven ‘Little’ A55 cores and one ‘Big’ A75. Not only does this offer more flexibility for manufacturers that use its designs, but the company says the Dynamiq family will be able to increase AI performance by more than fifty times over the next three to five years.
ARM says the “ground-breaking” Cortex-A75 boasts a 20 percent mobile performance boost over the older A73. It adds that the new processor can offer laptop-level performance while using the same amount of power as existing mobile processors. ARM sees the A75 being used in large-screen devices (laptops), servers, automobiles, and, of course, smartphones, where it will provide additional performance for advanced workloads such as machine learning. And thanks to improved instructions-per-clock efficiency, single-threaded performance is improved by around 20 percent.
(Via: http://www.techspot.com/news/69489-arm-new-processors-boost-future-smartphones-better-ai.html)
While you don’t really see it, these mobile chips make a world of difference to your entire smartphone experience. Design is not the only thing that sets smartphones apart like back in the days but what’s really in it, a.k.a. the mobile chip used. Nowadays, smartphones can be just as good as a regular PC. From single core to dual core and now quad core, it’s basically a mini PC or a handy computing device that you can take with you wherever you go.
If you don’t own a computer because you use your smartphone to do everything for you all the time, you spare yourself from the stress brought about by hard drive failures that plague most computer users. This link http://www.harddriverecovery.org/blog/hard-drive-failure-recovery-three-major-user-mistakes/ may be helpful for them even though smartphone users really need not bother themselves with these details at all. When looking for a data recovery service company to help you retrieve lost data because of a hard drive failure specifically on a Mac, this link may prove helpful to you.
The following post Chips For Smartphones, Not As Food was initially published on http://www.harddriverecovery.org
source http://www.harddriverecovery.org/blog/chips-for-smartphones-not-as-food/
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