I picked up my brother's old Galaxy S the other week, when his current smartphone died, and I got chest pains trying to organize his contacts etc over to it. It was terribly slow.
So bring on the 'more performance' for me...
Oh, and as it happens, I spent half an hour with an LG G3 today - that was nice!
I have a Samsung Captivate (AT&T Galaxy S) that is surprisingly sprightly. I'm running the latest Cyanogenmod (CM11) using the latest Semaphore kernel (which then allows an OC to 1.2GHz). It is absolutely night and day compared to stock Gingerbread. I haven't used it as my daily driver in quite some time but I still enjoy messing with ROMs on it.
Saying that a KitKat Android build (OC'd at that) is much faster than a Gingerbread one is not anything new. What he said was very different. And I must concur. Having a Galaxy Nexus and a LG G2, no matter what ROM and Kernel I use (OC'd to 1.5GHz even), the LG G2 will be faster at everything I do on it, while rendering more pixels. Loading Chrome on the Galaxy Nexus takes a few seconds where it takes a fraction of a second on the G2. Same with any other app.
Anything that helps bring more competition and therefore progress to the mobile industry is welcome news. I'd like to see *some* flagship Android device running Intel silicon.
Intel did (does?) have an ARM license (Architecture). They sold off the subsidiary that used the license years ago though. If Wiki is to be trusted, Intel acquire the license via StrongARM from DEC, created XScale as a successor, then sold XScale to Marvell. Not sure if Intel still holds the ARM Architecture license (I would think so since Marvell has its own license for ARM.)
Will repeat again and again that Intel should work all the day and night shifts on Broadwell tech with MS to bring true Windows on cellphones and tablets. Otherwise such remote desktop apps like Teamviewer on Android phones and tablets backed by latest tens and somewhere in the world hundreds Mbps network speeds with ultralow latencies will make both behemoths a football teammates.
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nathanddrews - Wednesday, August 20, 2014 - link
http://youtu.be/3yLJ5NHARMkruthan - Wednesday, August 20, 2014 - link
Games, only place where performance really matters..Notmyusualid - Wednesday, August 20, 2014 - link
Not true!I picked up my brother's old Galaxy S the other week, when his current smartphone died, and I got chest pains trying to organize his contacts etc over to it. It was terribly slow.
So bring on the 'more performance' for me...
Oh, and as it happens, I spent half an hour with an LG G3 today - that was nice!
MrCommunistGen - Thursday, August 21, 2014 - link
I have a Samsung Captivate (AT&T Galaxy S) that is surprisingly sprightly. I'm running the latest Cyanogenmod (CM11) using the latest Semaphore kernel (which then allows an OC to 1.2GHz). It is absolutely night and day compared to stock Gingerbread. I haven't used it as my daily driver in quite some time but I still enjoy messing with ROMs on it.Death666Angel - Friday, August 22, 2014 - link
Saying that a KitKat Android build (OC'd at that) is much faster than a Gingerbread one is not anything new. What he said was very different.And I must concur. Having a Galaxy Nexus and a LG G2, no matter what ROM and Kernel I use (OC'd to 1.5GHz even), the LG G2 will be faster at everything I do on it, while rendering more pixels. Loading Chrome on the Galaxy Nexus takes a few seconds where it takes a fraction of a second on the G2. Same with any other app.
usernametaken76 - Friday, August 22, 2014 - link
You obviously don't deal with business software.MrCommunistGen - Thursday, August 21, 2014 - link
Anything that helps bring more competition and therefore progress to the mobile industry is welcome news. I'd like to see *some* flagship Android device running Intel silicon.LetsGo - Thursday, August 21, 2014 - link
Intel should get a ARM licence.This kind of competition those not progress the mobile industry it seeks to divide it.
Stahn Aileron - Thursday, August 21, 2014 - link
Intel did (does?) have an ARM license (Architecture). They sold off the subsidiary that used the license years ago though. If Wiki is to be trusted, Intel acquire the license via StrongARM from DEC, created XScale as a successor, then sold XScale to Marvell. Not sure if Intel still holds the ARM Architecture license (I would think so since Marvell has its own license for ARM.)errorr - Friday, August 22, 2014 - link
Not even all architecture licenses are the same depending on what parts and how you use the ISASanX - Thursday, August 21, 2014 - link
Will repeat again and again that Intel should work all the day and night shifts on Broadwell tech with MS to bring true Windows on cellphones and tablets. Otherwise such remote desktop apps like Teamviewer on Android phones and tablets backed by latest tens and somewhere in the world hundreds Mbps network speeds with ultralow latencies will make both behemoths a football teammates.HammerStrike - Friday, August 22, 2014 - link
I'm going to use the last sentence in this post as an example of a non sequitur next time someone asks me what that is.SanX - Friday, August 22, 2014 - link
Basketball of course - auto correction's fault. Now got it?vicky102 - Monday, October 7, 2019 - link
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