Sunday debate: Are our smartphone processors fast enough?

15 July 2018
We discuss if faster chipsets actually benefit your user experience or if they are just for bragging rights.

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  • I
  • Iskander
  • iE7
  • 15 Jul 2018

Anonymous, 15 Jul 2018I want a screamer of a chipset. I want every app and game t... moreFor that, you do not need a screamer of a SoC, you will need many many gigabytes of fast RAM, so that every app can be already stored in it, meaning it will only need to read the RAM to 'open' your app of choice.

If you want to depend on CPU cycles to open any and every app within a second, you'll be let down for certain, unless maybe you drag along a server-rack with batteries to power it, on a cart.

    • ?
    • Anonymous
    • m5N
    • 15 Jul 2018

    I dont think chasing faster chipsets is any excuse for badly written software. its easier for apple as they dont have the range android has. After saying that faster chipsets with better power management would always be welcome.

      • ?
      • Anonymous
      • iBb
      • 15 Jul 2018

      My s8+ is more than enough for my needs, but i'm not sure what it'll look like a year or two from now.

        • ?
        • Anonymous
        • uI7
        • 15 Jul 2018

        I want a screamer of a chipset. I want every app and game to be opened within a second.

          Thing is, that every flagship chipset since the Snapdragon 800 has been a powerhouse of a chip in it's time. It's only after a few years that they start feeling slow, and that is due to 2 reasons. 1. OS becomes outdated. 2. Apps become more & more advanced, which in turn makes them more resource intensive.

          So today, a Snapdragon 845 will be snappy fast for literally anyone, but a few years later, it will feel sluggish as well.

          That's kinda how it goes.

            • P
            • PiCosm
            • mpR
            • 15 Jul 2018

            My Note8 is fast enough. But like on my desktop machines (Mac or PC) Chrome is the bottleneck. Sluggish, hogs CPU cycles and breaks on overly JavaScripty websites like the awful Independent. On the other hand, Samsung's own browser is both snappy and quite innovative.