Snapdragon 855 vs Exynos 9820 vs Kirin 980 (Video)

Three major smartphone SoC designers have now detailed their next-generation designs, which will power smartphones throughout 2019. Huawei was first with its Kirin 980, already powering the Huawei Mate 20 series. Samsung followed, announcing its Exynos 9820. Now Qualcomm’s just announced the Snapdragon 855.

As usual, a selection of performance improvements are on offer in both the CPU and GPU department. There’s also a continued focus on “AI” processing capabilities and faster 4G LTE connectivity, but no out-of-the-box 5G chip on the market just yet. If you’re thinking about an expensive smartphone purchase next year, here’s everything you need to know about the chipsets that will power them.

Spec overview

  Snapdragon 855 Exynos 9820 Kirin 980
CPU Core Semi-custom ARM Cortex – Kryo 485 Fully-custom ARM Cortex ARM Cortex
CPU Config 1x Cortex A76 @ 2.84GHz
3x Cortex-A76 @ 2.42GHz
4x Cortex-A55 @ 1.8GHz
2x 4th gen custom
2x Cortex-A75
4x Cortex-A55
2x Cortex-A76 @ 2.6GHz
2x Cortex-A76 @ 1.92GHz
4x Cortex-A55 @ 1.8GHz
GPU Adreno 640 Mali-G76 MP12 Mali-G76 MP10
AI Hexagon 690 NPU Dual NPU
Memory UFS 3.0 UFS 3.0 UFS 2.1
Process 7nm FinFET 8nm FinFET 7nm FinFET
Video capture 4K UHD, HDR @ 60fps 8K @ 30fps or 4K @ 150fps 4K @ 30fps
Video playback 8K UHD, 360 degree, up to 120fps,
10-bit, H.265 and VP9 video decoder
8K 30fps or 4K 150fps,
10-bit HEVC(H.265), H.264, VP9
4K @ 60fps
Modem X24 LTE
2000 Mbps down
316 Mbps up
Cat 20 LTE modem
2000 Mbps down
316 Mbps up
Cat 21 LTE modem
1400 Mbps down
200 Mbps up

These high-performance chips are all moving on to newer technologies across the board. There are the latest Arm and custom CPU designs, newer GPU components, beefed up machine learning silicon, and faster LTE modems. Samsung and Qualcomm are leading the industry here with 2Gbps LTE chips sporting mass carrier aggregation technologies, which should offer connectivity improvements at the cell edge and in dense areas over the Kirin 980. Multimedia support continues to push ahead too, with HDR and even 8K content support appearing in both the Exynos and Snapdragon chips, and hardware support for H.265 and VP9 codecs for better efficiency.

Notably, 5G modems are absent from all three of these next-gen chips, which might seem odd given the push some carriers and manufacturers are making for 5G in 2019. However, all three of the chips support 5G via external modems, making it an optional extra for those devices introducing support early.

Huawei and Qualcomm are now on TSMC’s 7nm, while Samsung is close behind on its own 8nm process.

Much more fuss has been made about the race to 7nm. Huawei made this a key part of its Kirin 980 announcement, which prompted Qualcomm to state it would build its next-gen chip on TSMC’s 7nm process too. The mobile industry is already quickly moving on from 10nm in its pursuit of power efficiency and smaller silicon footprints. For us consumers, 7nm chips should mean longer battery life and higher performing devices.

Samsung’s use of its in-house 8nm node suggests its own 7nm technology isn’t quite ready for mass production. Samsung expects a modest 10 percent power consumption improvement between its 10nm and 8nm processes. Meanwhile, TSMC boasts a 30 to 40 percent improvement with its own move from 10 to 7nm — clearly much better if accurate. Of course, other factors will determine final power consumption, but Samsung’s chip could well be slightly disadvantaged here.

Tri-cluster CPU designs go mainstream

Smartphone SoC CPU designs are currently more interesting and diverse than they’ve been in a long time. Today’s octa-core are striving for innovative, more efficient cluster designs consisting of more diverse and heavily customized CPU cores than ever before. big.LITTLE has given way to big, middle, little, with Cortex-A76, A75, A55, and Samsung continues to throw a heavily custom design into the mix.

2+2+4 CPU clusters with a shared L3 cache are the staples of Huawei and Samsung’s design. This transition away from a 4+4 design is to a tri-cluster is more optimal for sustained peak performance in a smartphone form factor and should also improve energy efficiency. The Snapdragon 855 takes this philosophy one step further, with a 1+3+4 CPU design. The “prime” core in the Snapdragon 855 boasts double the L2 cache and a higher clock speed than the three other big cores, making it the heavy lifter when peak single thread performance is required.

Huawei and Samsung opted for 2+2+4 CPU designs, while Qualcomm has gone for 1+3+4. All three are aiming for higher, more sustainable performance.

While Qualcomm and Huawei stick to Cortex-A76 cores in the big and middle sections, Samsung opts for the older Cortex-A75, likely to save on silicon size, and potentially heat. This will help make up for the gargantuan custom CPU cores and also allow for some extra GPU cores compared to the Kirin. Samsung implemented its own DynamIQ type cluster management system, as Arm doesn’t license out its DynamIQ shared unit tech for use with custom core designs, so we’ll have to wait to see how all of these designs handle task scheduling.

The other big question for this upcoming generation is whether Samsung’s fourth generation custom CPU design is more powerful and as power efficient as the Arm Cortex-A76, which forms the basis of the Kirin 980 and is tweaked in the Snapdragon 855. The third generation M3 core wasn’t as good as Qualcomm’s tweaked Cortex-A75 inside the Snapdragon 845 in both regards, and Samsung’s own 20 percent performance boost and 40 percent efficiency projections might not be quite enough to level the playing field.

Meanwhile, we’ve already seen the Kirin 980 excels at both single and multi-core CPU performance, firmly trouncing current generation products. There are some major design differences with the Snapdragon 855, but the potential of the Cortex-A76 certainly looks impressive. Overall, I’m expecting the Snapdragon 855’s design to have a slightly higher peak single thread performance, but multitasking and general application performance is much harder to call.

Gaming hits another gear

With mobile gaming continues to grab a major share of the global market, there’s good news to be found in this latest round of high-performance SoCs. Both the Samsung Exynos 9820 and Kirin 980 use the latest Arm Mali-G76 GPU, which will push gaming performance up a major notch.

While the Kirin 980 uses a 10-core configuration, roughly equivalent to a 20-core Mali-G72, the Exynos 9820 offers extra performance with a 12-core Mali-G76 implementation. Samsung’s chipset should be the better performer for gamers, but we’ll have to wait for a side by side comparison to know by exactly how much.

Editor’s Pick

This implementation will likely only close the gap with current generation Adreno graphics. Our hands-on with the Kirin 980 confirms that gaming performance in the ballpark of current Snapdragon 845 phones, sometimes slightly ahead, sometimes behind, but never breaking away. The Snapdragon 855 promises to add an extra 20 percent over the current generation, which should keep its nose notably out in front throughout 2019.

In summary, we’re almost certainly looking at Snapdragon 855 handsets offering the best gaming performance next year, followed by the Exynos 9820, and then the Kirin 980. Although all of these SoCs will be more than fast enough for a decent experience on all high-end mobile titles.

AI improvements

Machine learning, or AI as some people call it, has also seen a big performance boost across all of these SoCs too. For the first time, Samsung is supporting dedicated machine learning hardware inside its SoC with a neural processing unit (NPU) offering up to a 7x performance boost compared to the Exynos 9810. Huawei has doubled up on NPU silicon inside the Kirin 980, which certainly extends the company’s already impressive “AI” capabilities.

Editor’s Pick

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon has long supported machine learning tasks, via a heterogeneous mix of CPU, GPU, and DSP rather than with specific machine learning hardware. Its DSP is designed for fast math and has introduced extensions for specific operations, but it’s never been a dedicated machine learning design.

Mass matrix tensor math is now supported in hardware across all three of these flagship SoCs.

This generation, Qualcomm seems to have settled on the type of extra hardware it wants to boost machine learning performance. The introduction of a Tensor processor to the Hexagon 960 should really help to accelerate the Snapdragon 855’s performance in a range of applications.

AI performance is notoriously tricky to measure because it’s heavily dependent on the type of algorithms you’re running, the data type used, and the specific capabilities of the chip. The industry seems to have settled on dot product, mass matrix multiple/multiply accumulate as the most common case to accelerate, and all three of the chips offer a big boost to performance and energy efficiency to this type of application.

For consumers, that means faster and more battery efficient face and object recognition, on-device voice transcription, superior image processing, and other “AI” applications.

Which will be the fastest?

We don’t want to assume too much without hands-on time with devices, but we can already make a few assumptions based on the specifications.

CPU wise, the Snapdragon 855 will likely push the performance envelope the most, owing to its extreme CPU core setup and slightly higher clock speeds. It takes what Huawei has already accomplished with the Kirin 980 and pushes the idea to even higher extremes.

Samsung’s Exynos 9820 is a little tougher to judge, owing to its custom CPU core, in-house core cluster system, and 8nm rather than 7nm process. It’ll be fast, but we’ll have to wait for devices to judge just how well Samsung’s custom CPU stacks up.

Feature-wise, Qualcomm throws as many extras into its SoC as you could want. Super fast LTE, 5G support if you want it, fast charging, I’m not entirely convinced 8K video support is really anything smartphones will need anytime soon, but we also have higher frame rates for lower resolutions, which is great. Samsung’s Exynos packs in a similar array of features and a blazing fast LTE modem. The Kirin 980 has you pretty well covered too, and all can support 5G modems for high-end 2019 smartphones.

For gamers, Qualcomm’s Adreno 640 graphics core will likely continue to lead the field. For most applications, Arm’s Mali-G76 is more than fast enough, but those looking for extreme, top of the line performance may want to opt for a Snapdragon-powered handset next year.

Overall, all of these chips look very impressive and will push performance, and more importantly energy efficiency up another level. The move to 7nm, or 8nm in Samsung’s case, is good news for battery life, if nothing else. Furthermore, we’re entering an era of unique and interesting CPU cluster designs and machine learning capabilities. Smartphone SoC technology continues to innovate at an impressive rate.

Source: Android Zone

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Goodbye MetroPCS; Hello Metro by T-Mobile

  • MetroPCS will soon be called Metro by T-Mobile.
  • The new brand name coincides with a new logo and new plans.
  • Metro by T-Mobile will offer new unlimited plans that come with free perks, including Google One and Amazon Prime.

T-Mobile CEO John Legere took to YouTube today to announce big changes for its prepaid MetroPCS brand. The biggest change is a new name: Metro by T-Mobile.

In the YouTube clip above, Legere explains his frustration with people’s incorrect perceptions regarding prepaid services like Metro by T-Mobile. He says that customer surveys refer to prepaid services as “crappy” or “only for flip phones,” which in his eyes is totally incorrect.

Editor’s Pick

With the new rebrand of MetroPCS, Legere hopes people will drop some of those negative assumptions of prepaid services and see that Metro by T-Mobile is for budget-conscious users who refuse to compromise on services and features.

Along with the new name, Metro by T-Mobile is also offering new plans. Check the chart below:

A chart showing the most recent updates to the Metro by T-Mobile plans, as of September 24, 2018. T-Mobile

As you can see, there is a slight update to one of the existing plans and then two new unlimited plans on offer. The slight change to the existing $40 plan is that LTE data was doubled from 5GB per month to 10GB per month.

The two new plans offer unlimited LTE data as well as a few extra perks. The first plan is $50 for one line and gets you unlimited LTE data, 5GB of LTE hotspot data per month, and access to Google One. This is the first time Google One has been bundled with any wireless service.

The second unlimited plan becomes Metro by T-Mobile’s most premium offering. For $60 per month, you get unlimited LTE, 15GB of LTE hotspot, a Google One subscription, and an Amazon Prime subscription.

No joke: these are amazing deals. However, as usual, there are some caveats.

Editor’s Pick

The biggest caveat is that your LTE data is a lower priority than some T-Mobile customers, which means you will likely see slower service speeds than you would if you were a postpaid T-Mobile subscriber. However, this is no different than how MetroPCS operated in the past, so current MetroPCS customers will likely see no difference there.

Another caveat is that you will see even slower speeds if you use more than 35GB of LTE data in a 30-day period. You also are limited to streaming video at only 480p quality.

Finally, it is not clear how the two bundled services in the most premium plan will work. The fine print says that the Amazon Prime deal is only valid for new Amazon Prime members — does that mean you must create a new account to get the bundled service, or can you migrate your existing Amazon account? Also, it’s not clear which Google One plan is bundled up here. We’ve reached out to T-Mobile to clarify.

Metro by T-Mobile will take over starting in October.

What do you think? Do these new plans and features seem tempting enough to switch to Metro by T-Mobile? Sound off in the comments!

NEXT: The best prepaid phones

Source: Android Zone

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Samsung Health 6.0 brings new design and features

Screenshots of the updated Samsung Health app, Samsung Health 6.0. Samsung

  • Samsung Health 6.0 is rolling out now.
  • The newest update to Samsung’s health-focused app includes a design rehaul and some new features.
  • The latest version of Samsung Health also features better integration with Samsung wearables.

Hot on the heels of Google’s update to its health-focused application Google Fit, Samsung just announced the latest version of its wellness suite, Samsung Health (formerly S Health).

The newest version, Samsung Health 6.0, brings a fresh new design as well as some new features that will help you take control of your health and encourage you to stick with your fitness goals.

Editor’s Pick

The biggest change you’ll notice when you first launch Samsung Health 6.0 is the redesigned dashboard. The simplified interface utilizes white space extremely well and lets the user customize which statistics take priority, which will make it easier for you to see what matters most to you right when you open the app.

You can see a screenshot of the new dashboard below:

Screenshots of the updated Samsung Health app, Samsung Health 6.0. Samsung

Along with a design refresh, Samsung is also enhancing the social aspects of Samsung Health to make it easier for you to stay on track. Multiple studies have shown that the best way to lose weight and stay fit is to team together with other people, and the Samsung Health app makes that process incredibly easy.

Editor’s Pick

The improved Together section of the app allows you to share videos and fitness milestones with your friend and family right from the app. You can also join communities of people from around the world and share your progress with them to help celebrate your success or give you the motivation you need to stay on track.

The Discover tab was also updated to give quick access to articles, applications, and assorted information on health-related topics you think are important. This is where you’ll find fitness routine suggestions, healthy recipes, or reviews on fitness products.

Additionally, Samsung Health has better integration with Samsung wearables, especially the latest-and-greatest Samsung Galaxy Watch:

Screenshots of the updated Samsung Health app, Samsung Health 6.0. Samsung

Samsung Health will track 39 different workouts using your Samsung Galaxy Watch or other compatible wearables. In fact, it can even seamlessly track one workout merging with another — such as from running to cycling — without you having to manually tell the app to do so.

Finally, Samsung Health can give you health advice by connecting you with medical professionals through its “Ask an Expert” service. You can also look up symptoms you might be having to get a better grip on what’s going on using the appropriately-named “Symptom Checker.” However, these services are only available in select countries and languages for right now.

Give Samsung Health a try by clicking the button below!

Source: Android Zone

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Fortnite for Android beta arriving exclusively to Samsung, for now

  • Epic Games will make the long-awaited Fortnite for Android beta available first for a number of Samsung phones tablets starting today.
  • After a few days, more Android phone owners will be invited to the beta in waves.
  • The list of currently supported phones includes devices from OnePlus, Google’s Nexus and more.

It’s finally here. Epic Games is launching Fortnite for Android starting today. As previously rumored, Epic says the beta version of the highly popular battle royale shooter will first arrive on select Samsung smartphones and tablets starting today. Fortnite will then expand to more Android phones “in the next few days”.

Epic has confirmed to us, via a press release, that the list of Samsung phones and tablets that will be able to access the Fortnite for Android beta will include:

Owners of those phones and tablets will be able to download Fortnite for Android beta directly via the Samsung Game Launcher app. In addition, owners of the new Galaxy Note 9 and the Galaxy Tab S4 will be able to download and use a special Fortnite character skin in the game, shown above.

People who pre-order the Note 9 from now until August 23 can either get 15,000 V-bucks (the in-game currency for Fortnite) and the special skin, or a pair of AKG noise-canceling headphones for free. They will also have the option to get the V-bucks, the skin and the headphones for the price of $99.

After “a few days” (no specifics, unfortunately) Epic will expand access to the Fortnite for Android beta to more phones. Epic’s list includes some phones that were not listed in an initial leak of those devices a few days ago. Here’s what Epic has confirmed to us will be on this list:

As you can see, fans of OnePlus’s most recent phones should be happy to see them support the Fortnite for Android beta, along with the Essential Phone, the new LG G7 ThinQ, and owners of the first generation Pixel phones from Google. This list also includes a large number of devices from Chinese phone makers like Huawei, Xiaomi, and ZTE, which would seem to indicate that Epic Games really wants Fortnite for Android to do well in that part of the world. Finally, gaming-themed phones like the Razer Phone, the Xiaomi Blackshark, and the upcoming Asus ROG Phone will support Fortnite.

Not on this list are any phones from Motorola, Sony or HTC, and there’s only one Nokia device on this list as well, It’s possible more phones will be added to the Fortnite for Android support list in the coming weeks and months.

As we have reported before, Epic will not be releasing Fortnite for Android via the Google Play Store. In our interview with Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney, he stated that the developer views Android as an open platform, like Windows, and releasing Fortnite outside of the Google Play Store will allow Epic to keep the 30 percent of revenues that would normally go to Google.

You can sign up for the Fortnite Android beta at the link below. People with supported phones will be invited to join in waves and will be sent instructions on how to download and install the beta release. Keep in mind that Epic has labeled Fortnite for Android as a “beta” so there might be more than a few bugs and glitches compared to the final release. 

Source: Android Zone

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Latest OnePlus 5 and 5T Open Beta brings “oil painting” fix, Google Lens mode

  • OxygenOS Open Beta 14 and 12 rolling out now for OnePlus 5 and OnePlus 5T phones.
  • Google Lens mode and “oil painting” fix both included in latest beta firmware.

OnePlus is rolling out a new Open Beta for the OnePlus 5 and OnePlus 5T that brings camera improvements and Google Lens support to the Chinese brand’s 2017 flagships. Beta program subscribers can download Open Beta 14 and 12 (for the 5 and 5T, respectively) as an OTA update or via the Oxygen Updater as of today.

While the latest Open Beta firmware doesn’t have a huge amount of exciting new features, OnePlus 5 and 5T users will be glad to hear that it includes fixes for what many have dubbed the “oil painting effect” that adds a washed, softer look to photos. OnePlus had previously included the common complaint in a long list of promised fixes earlier this month.

Editor’s Pick

As well as additional “photo clarity,” the main draw of the latest update is the addition of a Google Lens mode to OnePlus’ bespoke Camera app. The mode, as you might expect, lets you access Google Lens immediately with just a quick tap of a shortcut within the Camera app.

The addition of Lens — Google’s super-smart visual search feature — shouldn’t come as any surprise as it previously showed up in an APK for OnePlus’ default camera in late June. A Lens mode has also been added to the Shenzhen-based OEM’s current flagship, the OnePlus 6, in the latest update launched earlier today.

The latest Open Beta updates are yet to hit the OnePlus website, but it should arrive in the next few days if you haven’t received an OTA notification. A full official release should follow shortly after.

Source: Android Zone

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HTC lays off 22 percent of its staff in its quest to save money

HTC

  • HTC announced it will lay off 22 percent of its workforce.
  • The company said the layoffs will further its plans to bring its smartphone and VR businesses under common leadership in each region.
  • The layoffs are representative of HTC’s ongoing financial troubles.

Time has not been kind to HTC as the once-mighty smartphone company struggles to make ends meet while it borders on irrelevancy. That struggle continues today when Reuters reported that HTC laid off 1,500 employees from its Taiwan manufacturing division.

According to HTC, the layoffs “will allow more effective and flexible resource management going forward.” The company also said the layoffs would be completed by the end of September and would further its plan to put its smartphone and VR businesses under one roof in each region.

However, the layoffs downsize HTC’s overall workforce by 22 percent. This is a significant reduction for a company that wants to get back on the road to profitability.

Keep in mind that the laid off 1,500 employees are separate from the 2,000 employees that HTC shipped off to Google in September 2017. Nonetheless, today’s layoffs is the latest indication of HTC’s financial troubles.

The company’s 2017 was one to forget, since its overall revenues were the lowest it recorded in the past 13 years. Things did not improve in Q1 2018, when HTC reported a 43.4 percent slide in revenues from Q1 2017 and a 55.4 percent drop from April 2017.

HTC did collect $1.1 billion when it shipped employees to Google, but those employees made up the half of the company’s research and development team that was in charge of the original Google Pixel and Pixel XL. That sale put much-needed money in HTC’s pockets, but it also sent mixed signals that the company might be on its way out.

Editor’s Pick

To its credit, HTC announced that it would make strategic investments in emerging technologies to help right the ship. We have heard that rhetoric in 2012 and 2017, however, and the company did not specify what it meant by “strategic investments.”

It also does not help that the U12 Plus is not off to a great start. As good of a phone the U12 Plus is, it does not surpass the competition in any meaningful way.

It is a sad state of affairs, particularly for veteran Android fans. Keep in mind that HTC was at the top of its game seven years ago and was the fifth-largest smartphone maker in the world. Now, the company does not even crack the top ten.

Source: Android Zone

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