Posted on 12/11/2017 10:54:10 AM PST by Swordmaker
Its almost hard to believe that in under a century, computers have advanced from occupying hundreds of square feet, to fitting into the palm of your hand. Even wilder is that the tiny machinery in a smartphone can process far more data, far more quickly than the behemoths of old. Dont spend too much time marveling at the advances of the past, however, because the future is only going to get more wild. Among the most exciting things coming to smartphones soon is Qualcomms Snapdragon 845, a mighty chip that will enable the next generation of mobile devices to do miraculous things.
Qualcomm showed off the Snapdragon 845 — the successor to its already popular and powerful Snapdragon 835 — at its Snapdragon Technology Summit in December, and it boasts a suite of remarkable features. First, the technical details: The Snapdragon 845 sports a Kyro 385 central processing unit (CPU), with eight cores and a clock speed of up to 2.8GHz, and an Adreno 630 graphics processing unit (GPU).
A Snapdragon 845 device can take pictures with far more shades of color.
For virtual and augmented reality, the 845 supports room-scale tracking to render immersive environments, accurate hand tracking, and Adreno foveation, which detects the specific area you are looking at and renders it in more vivid detail (this last feature looks nice, and allocates resources more efficiently).
Shutterbugs (professional or otherwise) will probably love the incredible capturing capabilities of the 845. The chipset supports high dynamic range (HDR) playback, as well as HDR recording. This means you can take photos with far more data in them. For example, instead of capturing 256 shades of a primary color with 8 bits, the Snapdragon’s 10-bit color palette offers over a thousand. Instead of the Rec. 709 color standard, which contains 16 million colors, the Snapdragon 845 supports the Rec. 2020 standard, which encompasses more than one billion colors.
If you like shooting video, the Snapdragon 845 also supports filming 720p video at 480fps. The chip can also create cinemagraphs, still photographs in which certain portions are animated.
Of course, the chipset is largely about potential. It will be up to smartphone manufacturers to take advantage of the 845s robust suite of features.
David Cogen — a regular contributor here at Digital Trends — runs TheUnlockr, a popular tech blog that focuses on tech news, tips and tricks, and the latest tech. You can also find him on Twitter discussing the latest tech trends.
A pacemaker is different from a hearing aid. If the hearing aid fails, I will not die. I will just be back where I am without one.
And if it is SO Essential to life, why is it not covered by basic health insurance?
I guess we will have to agree to disagree on this.
The 800 series chips are great and all, but I’ve moved everyone in the house to phones with the 625 chip. No perceptible difference in speed and all our phones last twice as long on a battery charge.
No more battery anxiety.
Science fiction of our youth has become reality.
“If I told you fifty years ago that man could have a device he would carry around in his pocket that would give him access to all of the information in the world, yet he would use it to watch cat videos and argue with people he did not know, would you believe me?”
Cat videos, yes. Argue with strangers, no.
Larry Niven describes a world in the far future where men fly between the stars and if he is very rich can afford a computer that fits in a pocket with 1 megabyte of memory.
If a hearing aid fails you can indeed be physically harmed, you think a device melting or catching fire in your ear or literally rupturing your ear drum is not harm?.. Like it or not true “medical devices” are held to a much higher standard... ALL medical devices.
You want to red neck yourself your own device when you age, feel free, sure you can rig something up cheap... you want to start selling it to others, you’ll realize your little device doesn’t remotely meet the standards required for public sale.
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