Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Snapdragon 865 detailed: AI, camera and gaming in focus this year

After teasing some of the features on Tuesday, Qualcomm dropped more details about the Snapdragon 865 and Snapdragon 765 SoCs on Day 2 of the company’s tech summit. Based on the details Qualcomm shared, it feels like the Snapdragon 865 is more of an incremental upgrade as far as the CPU and GPUs are concerned. However, as Qualcomm drilled it down the audience, the real innovation this year was achieved in AI compute, image processing and gaming.

The Snapdragon 865 is manufactured on TSMC’s 7nm N7P process, the same process that is used to make Apple’s A13 Bionic chipsets.

Let’s get down to the details of the Snapdragon 865 -

CPU

Starting with the CPU sub-system, the Snapdragon 865 uses new Kryo 585 cores based on the Cortex-A77 and Cortex-A55 cores. The sub-system architecture is the same as last time, and so are the peak frequencies for each cluster. There’s one prime core, three mid-cores and four efficiency cores. The peak frequency of the prime core remains at 2.84GHz while the mid-cores run up to 2.4GHz and the efficiency cores run at 1.8GHz. Despite that, Qualcomm is claiming a 25 percent performance boost and a 25 percent higher power efficiency. More interestingly, the CPU has twice as much L3 cache. 4 MB worth, which Qualcomm felt is needed so that high-intensity 5G use-cases doesn’t choke the pipeline. There’s now support for LPDDR5 memory but Qualcomm is also retaining support for the previous generation memory.

GPU

The Adreno 650 GPU now supports 144Hz displays and is 25 percent faster in rendering graphics. Qualcomm also claimed a 35 percent boost in power efficiency. More importantly, the GPU is now more tightly integrated in the AI Engine, sharing AI tasks with the DSP and the CPU. A big change this time is the fact that Qualcomm will push out updates to GPU drivers via the Google Play Store. The GPU now supports 10-bit HDR and 90 FPS gaming. There’s also across-the-board improvement in how the GPU can render shadows, lights, depth of field, motion and reflection in games. These are all part of Qualcomm’s Elite Gaming features that made a push for desktop-like experience in gaming this year. More on that later.

Connectivity

Moving on to connectivity, this was the biggest surprise of the event. For the longest time, analysts and media predicted Qualcomm will integrate the 5G modem with the SoC. That didn’t happen this year with the premium-tier Snapdragon 865. Qualcomm did do that with the Snapdragon 765 and the 765G, but on the Snapdragon 865, it’s still the modular approach from last year. There’s a new 5G modem though, called the Snapdragon X55. The X55 5G modem also has backward support for 4G, 3G and 2G and supports Dynamic Spectrum Sharing which Qualcomm claimed will be a stepping stone for a lot of telecom operators towards real 5G.

As to why Qualcomm did not integrate the modem with the SoC, we’re not really sure. Qualcomm said it will help OEMs reduce their development cycle, which because of 5G is expected to be a lot longer. It’s not really a technical incapability on the part of Qualcomm but more of a pragmatic decision to help OEMs take devices to market quicker in the face of complex 5G technologies. As a result, the X55 5G modem comes with its own RF-system.

ISP

Next, the Snapdragon 865 integrates the new Spectra 480 ISP. This is also one place which saw big gains, essentially making us a lot more excited about the smartphone cameras that are coming in 2020. For one, the ISP supports 200MP camera sensors which Qualcomm said is in the works and will be out next year. Then, the ISP supports 8K video recording at 30 FPS, unlimited 960 FPS slo-mo recording and simultaneous 4K HDR capture and 64MP snapshot. These are impressive feats that is primarily achieved by a big architectural change. For one, the new ISP can process 4 pixels per clock from 1 pixel per clock. This allows the ISP to crunch 2 gigapixels data per second. A big announcement this year was the support for Dolby Vision video capture, something we expect flagship smartphones of 2020 to tout as a marquee feature. When launched, these smartphones will be the first of their kind to capture live Dolby Vision HDR videos as all previous Dolby Vision content has been achieved in post-production. There’s also a dedicated core for noise reduction for better low-light photos and videos.

AI Engine

Most of these camera features we mentioned above is achieved in tandem with the 5th-gen AI Engine. Unlike its competitors, Qualcomm doesn’t restrict AI computing to dedicated cores. Instead, it distributes the workload across the CPU, GPU and the DSP. This time though, the benefits of the AI Engine is felt across the board, from the camera to the modem. As for numbers, the AI Engine is 2X more powerful with the capability to deliver 15 trillion operations per second (TOPS) as compared to 7 TOPS in the Snapdragon 855 last year. The increased speed now helps in on-device AI crunching which will find application in things like live transcription and translation. We saw a live demo of this at the keynote. The AI Engine will also allow in-call translation, with the voice signatures included. For instance, an English speaker will be able to hold a conversation with a Chinese speaker over a phone call, with his accent and intonations. There’s a new software stack to enable new AI use-cases. We saw demos from some of Qualcomm’s partners like Snap Inc, loom.ai, and the likes where live filters were applied instantly with zero lag.

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Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 865 is 25% faster, comes with mandatory 5G

A picture of the Snapdragon 865.

Enlarge / The Snapdragon 865.

Today, Qualcomm detailed its new flagship SoC for 2020: the Snapdragon 865. This is going to be the chip that ships in every single high-end Android phone that comes out in 2020, and there's a lot to go over.

First up: we're getting the usual modest speed increases that Qualcomm delivers every year. Qualcomm says the CPU and GPU are 25 percent faster compared to this year's Snapdragon 855. Like last year, this is an eight core, 7nm chip, but as AnandTech reports, now it's being manufactured on TSMC-improved 7nm "N7P" node, the same manufacturing process used by Apple's A13 SoC.

This year, the bigger CPU cores have been upgraded from Qualcomm's Kryo 485 cores in the 855. They have also been based on ARM's Cortex A76 design, to the new "Kryo 585 CPU," which uses ARM Cortex A77 cores. The frequencies are unchanged from last year: the single "Prime" A77 core is at 2.84GHz, and three other A77 cores are at 2.42 GHz. Four Cortex A55s make up the smaller cores for background processing and other lower-power tasks, and are clocked at 1.8GHz.

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More Google employees accuse the company of retaliation in NLRB complaint filed Tuesday in Chicago, alleging Google fired one or more employees for organizing (Bloomberg)

Bloomberg:
More Google employees accuse the company of retaliation in NLRB complaint filed Tuesday in Chicago, alleging Google fired one or more employees for organizing  —  A complaint filed Tuesday accused Google of terminating staff in retaliation for activism about working conditions …



AWS Outposts begins to take shape to bring the cloud into the data center

When AWS announced Outposts, a private cloud hardware stack they install in your data center, last year, there were a lot of unanswered questions. This week at AWS re:Invent in Las Vegas, the company announced general availability as the vision for this approach began to come clearer.

AWS CEO Andy Jassy, speaking at a press conference earlier today said that there are certain workloads like running a factory that need compute resources to be close because of low latency requirements. That’s where Outposts could play well, and where similar existing solutions in his opinion fell short because there wasn’t a smooth connection between the on-prem hardware and the cloud.

“We tried to rethink this with a different approach,” he said. “We thought about it more as trying to distribute AWS on premises. With Outposts, you have racks of AWS servers that have compute, storage, database and analytics and machine learning on them. You get to decide what composition you want and we deliver that to you,” he said.

The hardware is equipped with a slew of services including Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS), Amazon Virtual Private Cloud, Amazon ECS, Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service, and Amazon EMR. Conspicuously missing is S3 storage, but Amazon promises that will be coming in 2020 with other services on deck as well.

Make no mistake, the world’s premiere cloud infrastructure vendor will be installing a rack of hardware inside your data center. AWS has formed a team inside the company to handle installation, monitoring and management of the equipment.

The easy way to think about this would be that it’s a way for companies, who might be afraid to go all-in on the cloud to start experimenting with a cloud-like environment, which you can manage from an AWS console or VMware (beginning next year). Yet an Amazon spokesperson indicated that many companies like Morningstar and Phillips Healthcare, both of which are already AWS public cloud customers, are choosing Outposts because itgives these customers is ultra low latency, almost like a hyper local availability zone.

These customers need to keep compute resources as close as possible to run a particular set of jobs. While a Local availability zone like the one announced for Los Angeles yesterday could also suffice for this, Outposts could help when there isn’t Local option.

Customers can sign up for Outposts in a similar fashion to any EC2 instance, but instead of spinning it up in the cloud, an order goes to the Outposts team, and it gets racked, stacked and installed on prem.

From then on, Amazon still handles the management just as it does with a public cloud instance. For now installation and going management is being handled by an internal Amazon team, but over time they plan to work with systems integrators to help handle some of that workload.

Unvaccinated Samoans must identify themselves with red flags, officials say

Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi receiving a measles vaccine to support the Mass Vaccination Drive

Enlarge / Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi receiving a measles vaccine to support the Mass Vaccination Drive (credit: Samoan Government)

People who have not been vaccinated against the measles virus must mark their homes with red flags, Samoan officials announced Tuesday.

The decree comes amid a devastating outbreak of measles, which was declared in October. As of December 3, officials have recorded 4,052 cases, 171 of which were recorded within the 24 hours before the tally. Officials also reported 60 deaths, 52 of which were in children aged 0 to 4 years old.

The outbreak has flourished after the vaccination rate of infants plunged to an estimated 31 percent last year. Health officials linked the drop in vaccination to the tragic deaths of two infants, who were given measles vaccines tainted with fatal doses of muscle relaxant. Two nurses were convicted in the cases and sentenced to five years in prison. Despite the convictions, anti-vaccine advocates have used the cases to drum up fear of vaccines.

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The next Xbox is in the wild, connecting to current-gen Xbox One players

We'd prefer to use an official image of the console, but we won't have one of those until Xbox chief Phil Spencer invites us over to his house. And, ya know, Ars tech culture editor Sam Machkovech lives down the block in Seattle, so...

Enlarge / We'd prefer to use an official image of the console, but we won't have one of those until Xbox chief Phil Spencer invites us over to his house. And, ya know, Ars tech culture editor Sam Machkovech lives down the block in Seattle, so... (credit: Xbox)

A late Wednesday post from the leader of Microsoft's Xbox team, Phil Spencer, confirmed that the first "Project Scarlett" console is officially in the wild, ahead of its late 2020 launch window. And it appears that current Xbox One players have already unknowingly connected to it.

"And it's started," Spencer posted on his Twitter account on Tuesday. "This week, I brought my Project Scarlett console home and it's become my primary console, playing my games, connecting to the community and yes, using my Elite Series 2 controller, having a blast."

Without any extra posts or clarification as of press time, we can only surmise so much from this single statement. But it's admittedly dense. Primarily, it affirms a few details that Spencer and the Xbox team have previously announced about Project Scarlett, the current codename for the unnamed successor to the Xbox One console.

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Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Musk takes the stand in first day of “pedo guy” trial

Men in suits walk past a brick wall.

Enlarge / Elon Musk arrives at federal court in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2019. (credit: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Elon Musk has never been someone to back down from a fight. On Tuesday, Musk's confrontational personality brought him to a Los Angeles federal courtroom to testify in a defamation lawsuit brought by British cave explorer Vernon Unsworth. Musk told the court that he didn't intend for people to take it literally when he labeled Unsworth a "pedo guy" on Twitter, a site where he had more than 20 million followers.

Musk's feud with Unsworth began in July 2018, when Unsworth and Musk were both trying to help a dozen boys trapped in a flooded cave in Thailand. Unsworth, who had years of prior experience with the cave, advised authorities on the rescue effort. Meanwhile, Musk assembled a team of SpaceX engineers to construct a "miniature submarine" to aid in the rescue efforts.

The submarine was never used; rescuers had already rescued the boys by the time it arrived in Thailand. When Unsworth was asked about Musk's invention on CNN, he scoffed. The contraption had "absolutely no chance of working," Unsworth said, adding that Musk should "stick his submarine where it hurts."

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Mobikwik changes tack, to focus on digital credit

Mobikwik turned profitable in August and since last year it has recorded a positive contribution margin, which means the company’s incremental spending’s have been profitable. https://ift.tt/2YcERGs https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

ETtech Top 5: Startups bulk up their boards, Flipkart India cash infusion & more

A closer look at today's biggest tech and startup news and why they matter. https://ift.tt/363qGqe https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Firefox 71 arrives with Picture-in-Picture support on Windows for all video sites, Enhanced Tracking Protection and Lockwise password manager improvements, more (Emil Protalinski/VentureBeat)

Emil Protalinski / VentureBeat:
Firefox 71 arrives with Picture-in-Picture support on Windows for all video sites, Enhanced Tracking Protection and Lockwise password manager improvements, more  —  Mozilla today launched Firefox 71 for Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, and iOS.  Firefox 71 includes Lockwise password manager improvements …



Xiaomi Mi 10 With Snapdragon 865 SoC To Launch 'Very Soon'

Xiaomi Mi 10 is official and will be among the first phones to launch with a Snapdragon 865 next year. Meanwhile, the Redmi K30 will launch with a Snapdragon 765 next week. https://ift.tt/2YioOHs

OneConnect, a tech-as-a-service platform for financial SMBs, launches US IPO of up to $504M in a down round, after raising $650M last year from SoftBank and SBI (Julia Fioretti/Bloomberg)

Julia Fioretti / Bloomberg:
OneConnect, a tech-as-a-service platform for financial SMBs, launches US IPO of up to $504M in a down round, after raising $650M last year from SoftBank and SBI  —  Masayoshi Son, head of Japanese conglomerate Softbank, is facing another valuation cut in one of his investments.



Lost your Aadhaar card? Here’s how to get a reprint through mAadhaar app

In case, you have lost your Aadhaar card or you haven’t received it physically yet, you can order a reprint from the mAadhaar app itself. Here’s how can do it. https://ift.tt/2OKxSBy

Qualcomm Unveils 5G-Ready Snapdragon 865, 765, 765G SoCs

Qualcomm announced its flagship Snapdragon 865 SoC and mid-range Snapdragon 765 and Snapdragon 765G SoCs with built-in 5G modems at its Snapdragon Tech Summit 2019. https://ift.tt/3616m8S

As AI tech proliferates, India should update its patent laws: CII-TCS report

Software is no longer limited to traditional rule-based systems and has increasingly turned heuristic, showing higher intelligence than rule-based systems, it said. https://ift.tt/3611EYI https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Electricians are flocking to regions around the US to build data centers, as AI shapes up to be an economy-bending force that creates boom towns (New York Times)

New York Times : Electricians are flocking to regions around the US to build data centers, as AI shapes up to be an economy-bending force...