Qualcomm Snapdragon Summit 2021 live blog: the phone chip launch as it happened
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Bit more Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 news for you, and it’s another smartphone you may be able to buy. Oppo’s next flagship – highly likely to be the Find X4 – is now confirmed to feature the new Qualcomm chipset.
We’re back, and it’s to tell you that a new Motorola Edge phone is coming. Ruben Castano, Head of Customer Experiences at Motorola, said, “All the experiences you saw today will be available very soon on an upcoming Motorola Edge device.
“In fact, in just a few days we will reveal one of the very first smartphones to launch on this new Snapdragon 8 platform in China.”
That quote suggests this device may be exclusive to those in China, so this may not be a handset you’re able to buy. Previously, Motorola has introduced some smartphones in China and then brought them to other countries under new names at a later date.
That’s the end of the big show. The keynote is now over, and we’re expecting to learn further details about the new platform as the rest of this week goes on.
Below, you’ll find all of our coverage on the event so far. We may be back soon with futher detail about the chip, if there’s anything interesting in the next element of the event.
Lei Jun, Founder and CEO of Xiaomi is now on stage in the form of a video, and he has confirmed the Xiaomi 12 will be the first to use the new chipset. He also said the product “will be available soon”.
Rumors suggest we may be seeing the 12 introduced during December. That’ll likely be a China-only launch, if the company follows its normal cadence of launches. We’ll then probably see it introduced in further markets at a later date.
Whoops, that wasn’t the end. Qualcomm is now confirming the name of the new chipset (something we’d already told you) and it’s the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1. The idea here is that future generations will be called the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, Gen 3 and so on.
For its lower tier products, they’ll follow a similar structure. For example, the 700 series will now be called the Snapdragon 7 Gen 1 and so on.
Qualcomm has been running through all the features we’ve heard about over the last hour or so. This feels like it may be finishing up, so that may be the end of the opening keynote.
We’ll have more news throughout the rest of the day as we learn more about the new mobile platform and other announcements from Qualcomm.
It’s not a surprise, but the new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 looks physically similar to the Snapdragon 888. Nevertheless, below are some great photos of the new chipset so you can see it in the real world.
Qualcomm’s chips are everywhere, so I took its latest “everywhere” – on a roving #SnapdragonSummit photo walk.The new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, coming soon to a high-end Android near you.(📸: Sony Xperia Pro-I + Snapseed. Travel, lodging and entertainment provided by Qualcomm.) pic.twitter.com/UmTXpTGKYIDecember 1, 2021
We didn’t get any meaty announcements from Google there. It seemed it was to further confirm that the two companies are still working together, despite Google moving to its new chipset.
It was the first time we’ve heard Google IO 2022 mentioned, which we expect to happen in May 2022. The company hasn’t confirmed plans yet, but that heavily suggests it’ll be taking place next year.
Qualcomm just showed a range of logos on stage for companies that use its products, and it may be we see these are the manufacturers that will use the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1.
The manufacturers mentioned were Vivo, OnePlus, Asus, Sony, Sharp, Motorola, HTC, Lenovo, Nubia, Meizu, Black Shark, Leica, Kyocera, iQoo, Xiaomi, Oppo, Honor, Samsung, ZTE, Poco, Realme, Redmi, Fujitsu and HMD Global.
This isn’t a gurantee that all the new flagships from these companies will be using the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, and we have also listed almost every smartphone maker on the planet.
Well… here’s a surprise. Hiroshi Lockheimer from Google has just entered the stage. We didn’t expect Google to be represented on stage, especially as the company moved away from Qualcomm for its Pixel phones in 2021.
Qualcomm is announcing a partnership with ESL, which is the world’s biggest eSports company.
Craig Levine, co-CEO of ESL, in now on stage. Levine has said the two companies will announce “something really big next year”, so we don’t really know what this partnership means yet.
We’re onto mobile gaming. So far, we’re hearing lots about why mobile gaming is so big, why it’s important for the company to innovate in this area and more. Translation: Qualcomm is going even bigger on mobile gaming in 2021 and beyond.
A sketch on stage with Christano and JP Saxe saw the musician playing a song called “This is How CEOs Make Fun of Muscians” on a ukulele. It was one of the oddest things we’ve seen during a Qualcomm launch, but it was genuinely quite funny.
Many camera features were skipped over in the launch, but there are lots of innovations you can read about in our full coverage. A few of the higlights are below:
- An 18-bit ISP
- Burst mode is capable of up to 240 12MP photos a second
- A new bokeh for video mode
- Improvements for wide-angle photography
- Video Super-Resolution for Extreme Zoom
Christiano has moved onto Snapdragon Sound, and he has just announced this is the first chipset to include streaming lossless CD audio over Bluetooth. Musician JP Saxe is now on stage to talk about what this technology means for him.
8K video was just played on screen, and this new platform allows for 8K HDR on a smartphone for the first time. Whether any manufacturers include this features remains to be seen.
We’re moving onto the camera, and this is where things get exciting. Qualcomm is talking about how the rear camera is one of the biggest reasons people upgrade their smartphone so the company needs to get this right.
It’s right, especially when many of the best camera phones of 2021 didn’t feature a Qualcomm chipset inside. The iPhone 13 series remains one of the big contenders for that title, while the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro both have a fantastic camera experience with its new Tensor chip inside.
5G mmWave download speeds are 19x faster than sub-6 5G technology in the US. That’s according to stats that Qualcomm has shown on stage – we missed the source – and that’s why the company is making a big point about its push for improved mmWave features.
What else would fast upload speeds mean? It’ll open up further possibilities than just upload videos to your Instagram faster than ever. We’re thinking about how this could have an impact on augmented reality experiences and more.
The quality seemed good throughout the video call, even blown up on a massive screen in front of us. This isn’t a gamechanging use case for most people, but it proves that improved upload speeds are an important innovation for the next stage of 5G.
3.5 Gbps uploads are possible with this next-gen chip. An example of what that really means is coming up on stage… and it’s an 8K live video call that is being done over a 5G connection on Verizon.
Christano is now moving onto the technology inside the new chipset, and it includes a Snapdragon X65 5G modem-RF. It features up to 10Gbps download speeds, but the company is also keen to work on upload speeds as well.
Debra Marich, Senior Director of Product Marketing at Qualcomm, told TechRadar during a briefing for the new chipset, “We’re strengthening our Snapdragon brand as a standalone product brand for consumers, and we’ll be leveraging the equity we’ve built in the last Snapdragon brand for the past 10 years.”
Most of this is prelude so far, so we’re going to talk more about this name for the next-gen chipset. So why has this happened, and why is now the right time for Qualcomm to do this?
Ziad Asghar, VP of Product Management at Qualcomm, told TechRadar, “People know that 8 is basically the highest tier that we have. So we thought let’s simplify this – let’s call it the Snapdragon 8.
“This one will be called the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, and then as we go further we’ll call it Gen 2, Gen 3 and so on. I think it really simplifies it, and you don’t have to remember three numbers.”
Lightning-fast connectivity, cutting-edge performance and immersive experiences are the three main pillars of today’s announcement. That’s according to Cristiano Amon, Qualcomm’s CEO who is talking on stage right now.
Why isn’t this new chipset called the Snapdragon 898? Qualcomm is changing it up in 2021, and we’ve spoken directly to a few of the company’s representatives about why this has changed.
McGuire is talking us through how the Snapdragon brand is the number one global smartphone mobile processor brand. On stage, we can see adverts for the OnePlus 9, Oppo Find X3 Pro, Samsung phones, Xiaomi phones, Redmi phones and Black Shark.
Could that be a hint at where the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 will be next year? It could be, but we’ve yet to hear anything official from any brands.
Don McGuire, SVP and Chief Marketing Officer of Qualcomm has just taken to the stage, and he’s talking about how happy he is to be running live events again.
This does feel odd being at an actual tech launch again after almost two years of virtual launches.
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