Ryan McLeod / Android Authority
đ Happy Saint Patrickâs Day, everyone! I havenât had a drop of alcohol in over a year now, but Iâm sipping a nice green tea and wearing green socks. Very festive, I know. More on St. Patrickâs Day at the end of the newsletter, but first a little tech news from Qualcomm.
The Snapdragon 7 Plus Gen 2 is looking beastly
Supplied by Qualcomm
Qualcomm has officially announced its latest mid-range processor in the Snapdragon lineup, the Snapdragon 7 Plus Gen 2. Following a trend of excellent mid-range processors in recent years, this one nearly matches last yearâs premium Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 in some regards.
- Qualcomm claims you can expect a CPU performance boost of up to 50% compared to the Snapdragon 7 Gen 1, putting it in the same ballpark as last yearâs flagship silicon.
- More specifically, the new chip sports one âprimeâ Cortex-X2 core clocked at 2.91GHz, three Cortex-A710 cores clocked at 2.49GHz, and four Cortex-A510 cores at 1.8GHz.
- This is almost identical to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1âs CPU.
- The company also promises 13% better battery efficiency, as well.
- If youâre someone who enjoys emulating games, this is great news for you, as these tend to be very CPU-intensive.
- On the GPU side, performance is expected to double that of its predecessor, although you shouldnât expect it to compete with premium Android phones with a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 in that regard.
- Still, the company claims the new chip delivers better sustained performance, which has been a big weakness of modern processors.
- Machine learning also sees a two-fold boost, as do the image processing capabilities.
- A few other noteworthy features are aptX Lossless audio support, Wi-Fi 6E, and a Snapdragon X62 5G modem with a 4.4Gbps downlink.
- We pressed Qualcomm on pricing, and the company said that it expects phones with the new Snapdragon 7 Plus Gen 2 to cost between $400-600.
- The chipset is launching this month, with the Redmi Note 12 Turbo and realme GT Neo5 SE among the phones expected to sport the new SoC.
- Now, the question youâve all been waiting for: Where is the non-Plus Snapdragon 7 Gen 2? There isnât one, at least not yet.
- Qualcomm chipset product manager Cindy Lei noted that ââŠwithin our new mobile platform naming scheme, the Plus represents a platform thatâs sitting at the top of their tier or series.â
- Silly naming conventions aside, this new mid-range processor looks like an absolute powerhouse.
Stay tuned for more coverage early next week.
Friday fun
Hadlee Simons / Android Authority
A low-light shot of a beer glass
To celebrate this most Irish of days, I thought Iâd take the opportunity to run through the origins (legendary or historical) of St. Patrickâs Day traditions.
- First of all, Saint Patrick was a real Christian missionary and bishop in Ireland.
- He is the patron saint of Ireland, and today (March 17) is the supposed day of his death.
- Shamrocks, aside from being decidedly Irish, are commonly seen on St. Patrickâs Day because he used them as a metaphor for the Holy Trinity while converting pagan Ireland to Christianity.
- At least, thatâs what the legend says.
- The green-ness and leprechauns, on the other hand, have nothing to do with Saint Patrick and are just included for their Irishness.
- Interestingly, the holiday was far more popular among the Irish diaspora than it was in Ireland itself, at least until the 20th century.
- So why do people party and get wasted? Well, Christian Lentâs restrictions on food and alcohol consumption are lifted for the day, so people naturally take advantage while they can.
Cheers! SlĂĄinte!
Nick Fernandez, Editor.