Friday 6 September 2019

Qualcomm's expanding 5G to cheaper smartphones with new chips

Smartphone companies like Samsung use Qualcomm's modems in their 5G devices.

Next year, Qualcomm will expand its 5G modems across its Snapdragon 8 series, 7 series and 6 series processors, the company said Friday at the IFA electronics show in Berlin. The company's 8 series chips are aimed at high-end phones like the Galaxy S10, and it's the Snapdragon 855, alongside a Qualcomm 5G modem, that connects the Galaxy S10 5G, Note 10 Plus 5G and other phones to 5G networks. The company's 7 series and 6 series chips power much more affordable devices, like those from HMD, Motorola, and Oppo.


5G is touted as a game-changing technology, with the ability to dramatically boost the speed and coverage of wireless networks. It can run between 10 and 100 times faster than your typical 4G cellular connection today. And latency, the amount of time between when your phone pings the network and when it responds, is faster than what Wi-Fi provides.

But the first 5G devices have been expensive. The Galaxy S10 5G costs $1,299, while the regular S10 starts at $900. The new Galaxy Note 10 Plus 5G retails for $1,300, while the 4G model starts at $1,100.

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By expanding 5G across its product line, Qualcomm will make the wireless technology available to even more consumers. It won't be just the Samsungs of the world making 5G phones.

Qualcomm said its partners are developing over 150 designs using its 5G processors. It projected that expanding 5G across its product line will make 5G accessible to over 2 billion smartphone users.

Qualcomm, the world's biggest wireless chipmaker, is the primary company providing 5G modems to handset makers. Its chips are used in virtually all 5G phones on the US market. Its current 5G modem, the X50, runs on 5G networks only. Handset makers need to buy a separate chip that can connect to older networks. Two modems mean a more expensive, bulkier and battery-hogging phone. It's part of the reason why we've seen 5G phones cost so much more than their 4G siblings.

Qualcomm President Cristiano Amon talks up 5G on Friday during a keynote at the IFA electronics show in Berlin.
But its next modem, the X55, will be able to run on older generations of wireless technology in addition to 5G, addressing a lot of the X50 issues. Next year, Qualcomm will integrate the X55 with the brains of a new 8-series Snapdragon processor. That will make phones even cheaper and more power efficient, among other benefits. The company on Friday said it will give more details about that chip later this year, likely at its Snapdragon Summit in early December.

Source: News USA

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