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Key takeaways of zdnet
- Qualcomm launched Snapdragon 8 Elite Jean 5 chipset.
- This includes Qualcomm Oryan CPU and Next-Jen Qualcomm Adreno JPU.
- Improvements should enable better phone speed, camera, AI, and much more.
Almost every major smartphone launch in the previous year has shared a common theme: equipment has an increasing amount of on-device, advanced AI features. These experiences are made possible by only the phone that power power, and Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 is making even more possible with Jean 5.
On Wednesday, at Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Summit, the company unveiled its latest mobile platform, Snapdragon 8 Elite Jean 5 chipset. The chipset upgrade the partners in future smartphones to power the CPU and GPU to power camera, AI, and gaming experiences, including Samsung, Oppo and OnePlus.
Also: Report: Openai will launch its AI chip next year
One of the biggest standouts is its new 3-gene Qualcomm Oryan CPU, which the company said is the fastest CPU in the world with a summit up to 4.6GHz. This upgrade should be translated into high speed when using your device, including multitasking, gaming, launching apps, and more.
I run Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark, a CPU performance benchmark, which simulates how people use smartphones in everyday life on a reference device. It created 3786 single core and 12094 multi-core, which both are considered very good.
AI-First in the world we live, Qualcomm Hexagon NPU, responsible for handling a lot of AI loads, was to receive some upgrade. It now plays even more AI accelerator, according to the company, enables it to run 37% faster and 16% better performance per watt. The big language model (LLM) should be able to run on-device without renouncing the battery.
Qualcomm Sensing Hub, which includes on-device AI learning features such as a personal knowledge graph and Qualcomm Personal Ribback, has also increased, when Qualcomm Hexagon is paired with NPU, help unlocked new agents AI experiences.
Essentially, agent AI assistant will be personal for your needs. Recommendations based on the device are an important element, as it keeps all the information that it learns about you, such as conversations, routines and preferences, on the device. It maximizes safety to go to send its information to the cloud.
Also: Nvidia’s stunning $ 5 billion Intel Bet means enterprise AI and Next-Jen laptops.
Beyond AI, other calculated activities, such as gaming, will also see improvement. According to Qualcomm, the next generation Qualcomm Adreno GPU achieved a 20% better performance and a 20% decrease in power consumption than Snapdragon 8 Elite Chipset. In Geekbench 6 GPU benchmark, it scored 27925, which is also considered a competitive performance. The launch of Adreno High Performance Memory (HPM) contributes to a highly responsible gameplay.
In Content-Capturing Realm, Snapdragon 8 Elite General 5 Advanced Professional Video (APV) Codec and Dragon Fusion supports a complete suit of pro-grade video tools including recording in Dragon fusion, a completely computational video pipeline that every frame and reference-andware auto exposure and auto-focus, auto exposure and auto exposure to every frame Allows to be removed in great detail.
Meanwhile, Snapdragon Audio Sense is a suit of the microphone technology that enables the recordings of some pro-level sound with air-showing, audio zoom and HDR audio. Photography was not left behind, as the Qualcomm Spectra Image Signal Processor (ISP), responsible for computational photography such as Night Vision 3.0, was upgraded to the 20-bit pipeline for 4X the dynamic range.
Finally, the Qualcomm X85 5G modem-RF, integrated with Qualcomm 5G AI processor, is to unlock the “fastest, most battery-efficient, and reliable 5G advanced connectivity”, which according to the company, with the company, with the upload speed of up to 12.5 GBPS and upload speed of 3.7 GBPS.
exposure: Sabrina Ortise’s Maura, Hawaii Yatra, was covered by Qualcomm, for the Snapdragon summit, which was a common industry exercise for long distance trips. The decisions and opinions of the authors and editors of ZDNET are always independent of companies we cover.

