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2017-08-28
, 10:35
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Joined on Feb 2010
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#592
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Why not if the said SoC or some OEM's drop-in replacement still would be available?
Assuming it was available, the price should also be pretty low, and since the chip architecture would be have been well tested and familiar then further silicon editions would surely be more optimized and be less-power hungry.
Also there'd be good time to hone and fix open source drivers.
Actually now as I come to think about it, there are nothing but good reasons to use an old SoC.
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2017-08-28
, 11:14
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Joined on May 2012
@ Southerrn Finland
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#593
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I wouldn't take lower price for older SoC granted. Usually they are made on older manufacturing process, which may be more expensive to manufacture, also they don't have economy of scale as the demand for them is generally lower. This of course in situation where one is not trying to tap into some leftover pieces. Newer manufacturing process usually means improved power efficiency as well as improved processing power, so going to mid-level reasonably fresh SoC and architecture instead of already abandoned tech IMO has it's benefits. Also, creating PCB with all the other components for old SoC may require more effort and add up costs. OMAP was decent architecture but AFAIK it didn't have much demand outside Nokia and when Nokia went with Qualcomm, TI didn't have much incentive to develop it further. Maybe if Nokia had bought it and made it "their own" like Apple did with their own SoC there would have been a differentiator... but it would have required MeeGo to succeed.
So, IMO there are not many good reasons for (really) old SoC if one is to create competitive device.
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2017-08-28
, 11:50
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Joined on Feb 2010
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#594
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As it happens, device battery runtimes have remained about the same and in the long view gone dramatically down even as battery capacity and technologies have improved all the time.
I hold the view that going for all-the-time-faster CPU's and new architectures is the culprit to blame.
On the other hand if you had an existing SoC that would be evolved in manufacturing technology but not tried to squeeze more power out of it would certainly come more power-efficient over generations.
And having same drivers that could be optimized properly and not some quick-hack-let's-just-make-android-compatible-drivers-now would leverage to get more out of the HW.
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2017-08-28
, 11:51
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Joined on Aug 2017
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#595
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I don't fully buy into that explanation.
As it happens, device battery runtimes have remained about the same and in the long view gone dramatically down even as battery capacity and technologies have improved all the time.
I hold the view that going for all-the-time-faster CPU's and new architectures is the culprit to blame.
On the other hand if you had an existing SoC that would be evolved in manufacturing technology but not tried to squeeze more power out of it would certainly come more power-efficient over generations.
And having same drivers that could be optimized properly and not some quick-hack-let's-just-make-android-compatible-drivers-now would leverage to get more out of the HW.
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2017-08-28
, 12:30
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Joined on Aug 2009
@ Budapest, Hungary
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#596
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I really doubt that; for example N9 performance is pretty good IMHO.
The real determining fact here is that only gaming people need high performance hardware
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2017-08-28
, 12:53
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Joined on May 2012
@ Southerrn Finland
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#597
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2017-08-28
, 13:22
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Joined on Aug 2009
@ Budapest, Hungary
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#598
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And now, seriously, hands-up anyone who really needs those all-the-time-more high-resolution screens?
And please define why, since the pixels already are too small to see withlut a microscope??
I hold that even halfHD resolution is almost too much for 5" device...
And cameras! people have gone straight off the edge megapixel-crazy. And it's the Mpx:es that consume power/memory/cycles.
Instead I'd opt for less pixels and better optics...
I am willing to bet anyone immediately that I can capture more striking image of any given subject/situation with my 15 years old DSLR having only 3 megapixels than any and all daring to contest me with latest mobile devices!
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2017-08-28
, 13:26
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Joined on Feb 2010
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#599
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2017-08-28
, 13:36
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Joined on
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#600
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And now, seriously, hands-up anyone who really needs those all-the-time-more high-resolution screens?
And please define why, since the pixels already are too small to see withlut a microscope??
I hold that even halfHD resolution is almost too much for 5" device...
And cameras! people have gone straight off the edge megapixel-crazy. And it's the Mpx:es that consume power/memory/cycles.
Instead I'd opt for less pixels and better optics...
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The real determining fact here is that only gaming people need high performance hardware
That's just about all, same as with PC computer video cards; it's the gaming people who need the performance.
I could not give a toss about games. I don't play games. At all.