OnePlus 2 officially revealed to sport Snapdragon 810 SoC

17 June, 2015
The Chinese company is now teasing its next device's internals one by one, the chipset being first.

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  • b
  • bmarqa
  • ibn
  • 18 Jun 2015

Most comments are nonsense just like blind-man serching his way. Albeit only few with facts and fancies. Rest sounds like absent minded professors.

    • N
    • NO FAN BOY...!
    • rAZ
    • 18 Jun 2015

    Another company trying to release a new frying pan...and they even said that the heat will be distributed evenly throughout the phone...so that when you fry your eggs , it will be evenly heated from all sides...:-)
    There is nothing improvement in V2.1 , the same was said by Xiaomi for the Mi4i , they said we have used SD615 V2.0 which does not have heating issues , but it heats even more then the V1.0 chipset...!
    I hope SD810 V2.1 will heat like its previous version...!

      • ?
      • Anonymous
      • 3xK
      • 18 Jun 2015

      Anonymous, 18 Jun 2015Because they want to fry an egg on thatBecause they designed their flagship long

      Time ago before the heating is

      discovered.

        • ?
        • Anonymous
        • 2CE
        • 18 Jun 2015

        Graphite is superconductive meaning the heat won't be limited to single spot.

          Instead of doing all that they could have just used a different SoC. Who knows if this will work or not but overheating SoC will surely damage the phone steadily.

            • ?
            • Anonymous
            • bxb
            • 18 Jun 2015

            Snapdragon will be like AMD, not going anywhere

              • ?
              • Anonymous
              • 7Xp
              • 18 Jun 2015

              The new trend now us to release phones which double as heaters/flat irons. Lol

                • ?
                • Anonymous
                • kkx
                • 18 Jun 2015

                Would be interesting to see how the v2.1 combined with slightly improved thermals compared with everything else S810 related. And to know if it is improved a bit or lot in v2.1, or if its more related to the thermals and separate running cores.

                  • ?
                  • Anonymous
                  • 9xx
                  • 18 Jun 2015

                  AnonD-33428, 18 Jun 2015Why is every OEM falling for 810 even after knowing the hea... moreBecause they want to fry an egg on that

                    • D
                    • AnonD-399841
                    • XN}
                    • 18 Jun 2015

                    AnonD-33428, 18 Jun 2015Why is every OEM falling for 810 even after knowing the hea... morebecause snapdragon is open source

                      • D
                      • AnonD-399841
                      • XN}
                      • 18 Jun 2015

                      kenosis, 18 Jun 2015Do you all see 6 lines below number "1" of "... morelol.. mediatek ftw

                        • A
                        • AdamBoy64
                        • tRX
                        • 18 Jun 2015

                        AnonD-33428, 18 Jun 2015Why is every OEM falling for 810 even after knowing the hea... moreYep, best wait until OnePlus 3.

                          • k
                          • kenosis
                          • 2@U
                          • 18 Jun 2015

                          Do you all see 6 lines below number "1" of "810". It looks like melting (due to overheat)

                            • D
                            • AnonD-4254
                            • t@x
                            • 18 Jun 2015

                            Anonymous, 17 Jun 2015You do know that OPPO (their mother company) has released d... moreSorry for my uninformed comment.
                            I was uninformed about OPPO's relation with Oneplus.

                              • j
                              • jrharbort
                              • jLB
                              • 18 Jun 2015

                              AnonD-33428, 18 Jun 2015Why is every OEM falling for 810 even after knowing the hea... moreBecause of industry and comsumer pressure to use the absolute best components available each year. Even if said components have issues. They can't exactly be expected to recycle the 801 or 805. The 808 is decent, but far from the true flagship performance people would expect. The other alternative would be an offering from Mediatek.

                                • b
                                • bros
                                • 3sE
                                • 18 Jun 2015

                                Another hot news! This forum is so hot

                                  • D
                                  • AnonD-63308
                                  • IVN
                                  • 18 Jun 2015

                                  Nevermind, we'll just let the 'lucky' early buyers to test them first and learn from their experience.

                                    • D
                                    • AnonD-33428
                                    • 4@N
                                    • 18 Jun 2015

                                    Why is every OEM falling for 810 even after knowing the heat and throttling issues it has?

                                      • E
                                      • Eddie
                                      • vxn
                                      • 18 Jun 2015

                                      Hope they opted for Exynos 7420 found on S6 instead of the literally fire breathing Snapdragon 810. Exynos 7420 is built on 14nm vs 20nm from competition and it has been proven to perform better in real life usage and on bench marks minus the overheating.

                                        • w
                                        • walkman8
                                        • LiP
                                        • 18 Jun 2015

                                        AnonD-407003, 17 Jun 2015Well, this just makes me all the more happier that I ordere... moreG4 ain't no angel, though. Even though it doesn't overheat, S808 eats up a lot of battery autonomy.