disolitude said:
Baalzamon said:
disolitude said:
I'm not impressed at all. Looks like Samsung is going the apple route of providing incremental updates while keeping the design and feel the same. What we have here is a Galaxy S3s.
1mm Thinner, 1 gram lighter, more megapixulz...innowayshun!
Snapdragon 4 pro and not 600/800, same cheap and plasticky design as last year...i guess they figure they made it and they can ride their success to the bank.
|
I find it interesting that you cite the lack of a Snapdragon 600, when pretty much the only noticeable difference between the two is 1.9 vs 1.7 GHz clock speed. Same cache, same gpu, same instruction set. It becomes even more ironic when the Snapdragon S4 Pro in the S4 will have...wala...1.9 GHz.
The 800 is a whole different story, but I don't think anybody in any way whatsoever expected the 800 in the S4. I'm sure cost is significantly higher, not to mention it isn't even available yet, which would have delayed the launch of the S4 by several months.
If you don't want a cheap plasticky design, then go buy a DNA, it's a solid phone.
|
From anandtech - http://www.anandtech.com/print/6754
" This is quad core Krait 300 (as opposed to 200 in MSM8960 or APQ8064) which brings a 15 percent increase in IPC as well as higher clocks (from 1.5 to 1.7 GHz), for about 20–30 percent higher overall CPU performance."
APQ8064 is S4 Pro.
The difference isn't huge (10-15% manye) but it's important to note that HTC One is getting 12000+ on quadrant while Galaxy S4 is going to get ~8000 if it's in line with current S4 Pro scores.
http://www.phonearena.com/news/HTC-One-with-its-Snapdragon-600-blasts-away-through-benchmarks_id39973
|
You do realize that this (supposed) S4 Pro has 1.9 GHz instead of the max clock on any other S4 Pro of 1.7 GHz, as well as DDR3 memory instead of the DDR2, right? Because those are the major differences between the S4 Pro and the 600. The only other difference (which based on how different this processor already is from the S4 Pro, we aren't really sure if this is still the case) is the increased inter-process communication in the 600.