Qualcomm is reportedly testing 10" tablets with the upcoming chipset with Oryon CPU

Peter, 09 February 2023

Qualcomm is apparently testing its Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 chipset, aka SC8380, inside a development device with a 10” display. This indicates that the chipset will be aimed towards 10” (or larger) tablets and probably some 2-in-1 tablets and even Windows on ARM laptops too. Microsoft might even have another go at a Surface Neo type device with dual screens.

These, of course, will be going up against Apple’s iPads with M-series chipsets and MacBook Airs. Which is fitting since the chipset and its Oryon CPU cores were designed by Nuvia, a company formed by former Apple employees that worked on said M-series chipsets.

The Snapdragon 8cx Gen 4 (code name Hamoa) will have 12 CPU cores, 8 performance (up to 3.4GHz) and 4 efficiency cores (up to 2.5GHz). There will be a built-in Adreno 740 GPU, which is fairly capable, though the larger form factors like laptops can also be equipped with external GPUs (connected over 8x PCIe 4.0), as long as they have the cooling for it.

Qualcomm is reportedly testing 10'' tablets with the upcoming chipset with Oryon CPU cores

Those larger devices will also have support for NVMe drives (4x PCIe 4.0), though the smaller and cheaper devices will likely stick to UFS 4.0. Connectivity options include USB 4 (based on Thunderbolt 4) with DisplayPort 1.4a.

Qualcomm has reportedly been testing Hamoa-based development devices since November of last year. It’s not entirely clear when the first commercial devices will become available, it might be later this year or even early 2024. We should start seeing leaked benchmark results before then, however.

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Reader comments

  • Sin
  • 12 Feb 2023
  • 3Hq

ARM SoC actually already have a onboard GPU The mobile version Snapdragon 8 gen 2 Has a adreno GPU It's about equal too a desktops gtx 1050/gtx1630 The Snapdragon processor here similar performance maybe little better as its a ...

  • Hct300
  • 11 Feb 2023
  • nxs

x64 Intel? X86-64 you mean? Intel had nothing to do with the original 64bit instruction set, it was AMD, other than a few minor tweaks, Intel X64 instructions are AMD64.

  • Anonymous
  • 11 Feb 2023
  • IbI

And in the cloud you will not have any privacy, you will get lots of ads and in the end you will pay a subscription fee to make them run faster, with more data and fewer ads.

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