Posted on 01/26/2011 10:46:29 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Qualcomm has shown off a new version of its Snapdragon chipset that will let handsets work with LTE (Long Term Evolution) networks as well as current 3G networks. Set to sample in 2011, the MSM8960 will also integrate Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, and an FM receiver, according to a variety of reports.
The only reference we could find to the MSM8960 on Qualcomm's website is the obviously dated slide reproduced below. According to a variety of sources, however, the chipmaker detailed its new Snapdragon offering at a meeting held for analysts yesterday in New York.
It's said the MSM8960 will be the company's first mobile processor to move to a 28nm design. A new microarchitecture will allow the device to deliver approximately five times the performance of the original Snapdragon chip (see later in this story for background), while using 75 percent less power, Qualcomm adds.
In his presentation, Qualcomm Executive Vice President Steve Mollenkopf reviewed the success of the company's current Snapdragon offerings and then made the claims cited above. Another slide (below) suggested that the MSM8960 will include dual cores clocked at 1.2GHz, much like the MSM8260 and MSM8660 that were announced in June.
Where the MSM8260 targets only HSPA+ networks and the MSM8660 supports both HSPA+ and CDMA2000 1xEV-DO Rev. B, however, the MSM8960 will support both of these plus LTE, making it the "world's first multi-mode 3G/4G integrated chipset, in Qualcomm's words. The device will also include Wi-Fi, a GPS receiver, Bluetooth, and FM, the company adds.
In an apparent comparison to the original Snapdragon, Mollenkopf said the MSM8960 will offer "four times" the graphics performance. It's said the chip's "Adreno 3xx" GPU (graphics processing unit) will, like those on the MSM8260 and MSM8660, provide OpenGL-ES and OpenCL v1.1 compatibility as well as 1080p video encode/decode.
Background
Qualcomm's MSM8960 chipset represents the latest version of the company's Snapdragon, which has dominated the world of high-end smartphones and is employed in every Windows Phone 7 device.
The original 1GHz QSD8250/8650 Snapdragon chipsets debuted in Nov. 2007, featuring a Scorpion core that -- like the ARM Cortex-A8 -- is based on the ARMv7 instruction set and offers similar superscalar technology. (In fact, many observers refer to it flatly as a member of the Cortex-A8 family.)
The QSD8x50 was followed in 2009 by a 1.3GHz QSD8650A, which added 2D/3D graphics accelerators, and was touted for its up to 30 percent lower power consumption. Qualcomm later announced a 1GHz, mid-range MSM7x30 variant of the Snapdragon design said to be capable of capable of playing 720p video.
In its June announcement, Qualcomm called the MSM8x60 chipsets the first dual-core versions of the Snapdragon. However, last year the company began sampling a somewhat similar QSD8672 that combined two 45nm-fabricated 1.5GHz Scorpion cores.
The QSD8672 and MSM8x60 were both touted by Qualcomm as representing the third generation of Snapdragon technology. With its LTE support and 28nm fabrication, the newly announced MSM8960 apparently moves ahead still further.
Further information
According to Qualcomm, the MSM8960 will begin sampling during 2011. A copy of Steve Mollenkopf's presentation may be found on the Anandtech website, here.
Unfortunately, the standards for LTE have not been established yet. That is why you have everybody running around talking 4G even though each carrier uses a different technology and delivers different speeds.
Do you know how small 28nm is? wow.
Well....it is damn small....was looking around for some good Graphic way of showing ...just how small....found nothing yet.
Thanks to seton89...for this link on another thread:
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ARM and IBM plan to produce a 14nm
See link at post #2.
Thanks for the link.
Thanks Ernest.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2377517,00.asp
Report: Samsung and Apple Quadruple Application Processor Production
As Apple devices get more popularor, rather, more widespread as a result of the company’s imminent iPhone launch through mobile carrier Verizon and the much-expected debut of the iPhone 5someone has to make the chips that actually power the devices’ features. Apple seems keenly aware of this fact, as the company is allegedly boosting its application processor order from Samsung from 5,000 monthly sheets of chips to 20,000.
...
Samsung has been Apple’s partner in creating the application processors that power Apple devices for some time now, and the two companies worked togetherin a fashion—to develop Apple’s A4 line of system-on-a-chips. Samsung and Intrinsity initially collaborated to create Hummingbird, a revamp of ARM’s Cortex A8, which many consider the groundwork for Apple’s A4 processor after Apple purchased Intrinsity outright in April of 2010.
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