I wanna buy a new cell phone but I must know which CPUs support a USB DAC. I know for sure that sgs3 supports this but I'm looking for something with 5.5" screen. Snapdragon 800 phones are too expensive, 400 are to weak and there is no snap 600 5.5" cells so I have no choice than MediaTek so do the MTK cells support a USB DAC??
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My CDMA GNex has a tiny Qualcomm 4G sticker on the bottom end near the micro usb port. Does this indicate it does not have the Texas Instruments OMAP 4460 chipset that supports WiFi Display?
Means the LTE chip is of qualcomm origin. Every Galaxy Nexus is running OMAP 4460.
Do qualcomms quick chargers work with the find 7? I know it will charge, but does it do it faster than normal? Will it charge to 60% in 30 mins etc?
I know VOOC is faster.
The reason is I want to buy a charger for the office and a battery pack. Quickcharge battery packs come in higher mAH and are cheaper. If I share it with other people, quickcharge is more in use with my friends. Most have never even heard of Oppo nevermind VOOC
adiumx said:
Do qualcomms quick chargers work with the find 7? I know it will charge, but does it do it faster than normal? Will it charge to 60% in 30 mins etc?
I know VOOC is faster.
The reason is I want to buy a charger for the office and a battery pack. Quickcharge battery packs come in higher mAH and are cheaper. If I share it with other people, quickcharge is more in use with my friends. Most have never even heard of Oppo nevermind VOOC
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here, now, are the phones and tablets that are supported by Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0:
HTC Desire EYE
HTC One M8
HTC One Remix (Verizon Mini 2)
Moto X 2014
Motorola Droid Turbo
Nexus 6
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet
Sony Xperia Z3
Sony Xperia Z3 Compact
Sony Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact
International devices
Fujitsu Arrows NX
HTC Butterfly 2
Kyocera URBANO L03
Moto Maxx
Panasonic CM-1
Samsung GALAXY S4 (Japan)
Sharp AQUOS Pad
Sharp Aquos Tab
Sharp AQUOS Zeta
Sony Xperia Z2 (Japan)
Xiaomi Mi3
Xiaomi Mi4
YOTAPHONE 2
Xiaomi Mi Note
Source: Qualcomm
lesscro said:
Here, now, are the phones and tablets that are supported by Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0:
HTC Desire EYE
HTC One M8
HTC One Remix (Verizon Mini 2)
Moto X 2014
Motorola Droid Turbo
Nexus 6
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet
Sony Xperia Z3
Sony Xperia Z3 Compact
Sony Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact
International devices
Fujitsu Arrows NX
HTC Butterfly 2
Kyocera URBANO L03
Moto Maxx
Panasonic CM-1
Samsung GALAXY S4 (Japan)
Sharp AQUOS Pad
Sharp Aquos Tab
Sharp AQUOS Zeta
Sony Xperia Z2 (Japan)
Xiaomi Mi3
Xiaomi Mi4
YOTAPHONE 2
Xiaomi Mi Note
Source: Qualcomm
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for replying. I have seen this list but it doesn't fully answer my question.
Qualcomm quickcharge 2.0 is for snapdragon 801 amongst others. Oppo find 7 has a snapdragon 801. Has anyone tried quickcharge 2.0 with find 7 and found that it actually quick charges?
SoC Snapdragon (Snapdragon 200, 400, 410, 615, 800, 801, 805) + specific charge system...
Anyway Oppo developped a custom solution then... i think it will be a trouble...
adiumx said:
Do qualcomms quick chargers work with the find 7? I know it will charge, but does it do it faster than normal? Will it charge to 60% in 30 mins etc?
I know VOOC is faster.
The reason is I want to buy a charger for the office and a battery pack. Quickcharge battery packs come in higher mAH and are cheaper. If I share it with other people, quickcharge is more in use with my friends. Most have never even heard of Oppo nevermind VOOC
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. No, Find 7 wont work with Quick Charge.
2. You can buy a VOOC Flash Charge Power Bank, which supports VOOC.
That means you can use a VOOC power brick to charge the Power Bank (Full 6000 mAh in 2.5hrs), and then use the Power Bank to charge your Find 7 at VOOC speed (75% in 30mins) on the go.
It costs $60-$80.
3. You can get any Quick Charge Power Bank that has the Output of 5V/2A. It will charge your Find 7 at double conventional speed (100% in 1h30'-1h45'). But do remember to charge that Power Bank with a Qualcomm Quick Charger (which costs you some extra $$) , cuz it wont work with VOOC
Just received the Moto G5 (UK unbranded version: Single Sim, 2GB RAM, Snapdragon 430).
Its unlocked, running LineageOS (7.1.2). Very happy with such a budget phone. The only problem is it charges slow. I am using a Qualcomm® certified charger, which has a blue LED for normal charging, that turns green when using Quick Charge. It works fine for my HTC phones. The Moto G5 seemingly doesn't work with Qualcomm's QC chargers?
Does the Moto G5 support Quick Charge 3.0 ? In theory it should do as the Snapdragon 430 does. Is it a firmware problem that is likely to be resolved, or just by design only to work with Motorola branded TurboPower™ chargers? It would be disappointing if that's the case.
outrage_uk said:
Just received the Moto G5 (UK unbranded version: Single Sim, 2GB RAM, Snapdragon 430).
Its unlocked, running LineageOS (7.1.2). Very happy with such a budget phone. The only problem is it charges slow. I am using a Qualcomm® certified charger, which has a blue LED for normal charging, that turns green when using Quick Charge. It works fine for my HTC phones. The Moto G5 seemingly doesn't work with Qualcomm's QC chargers?
Does the Moto G5 support Quick Charge 3.0 ? In theory it should do as the Snapdragon 430 does. Is it a firmware problem that is likely to be resolved, or just by design only to work with Motorola branded TurboPower™ chargers? It would be disappointing if that's the case.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After doing some reading heres some information
Quick charge & turbo charge are the same thing - its just manufacturers brand names
Both moto g5 & g5 plus phones support fast charging, with the Moto G5 coming with a 10W TurboCharge charger out of the box, and the G5 Plus with a 15W TurboCharge adapter.
The Motorola Turbo charger will charge the device at a faster rate when the device is below 78%. If the device is already at 78% or higher, it will charge at regular speed.
1% - 65% 53 mins
- 96% 1hr 33 mins
- 100% 1hr 52 mins
Currently as far as I can tell it's quick charge 2.0 although as you said in theory it can support 3.0 - Maybe a future firmware upgrade will allow this
I assumed it would it be same thing under a different silly brand name - it says on Motorola website that their ' TurboPower™ ' charger is in fact Quick Charge 2.0 - and works as such in other phones, so I can't see why Quick Charge certified chargers don't work with this phone.
Anyway it doesn't for me, so I am hoping it will be fixed in future firmware. I have emailed Motorola direct about it, I will see if they reply....
Am I write in thinking the only thing special about the quick charges is the wattage? Pin output being the same as good old changers?
I ask as I going to be fitting new plug sockets with high wattage USB ports in some locations around the house. Chargers are always going walkies in my house :crying:
trotter2000 said:
Am I write in thinking the only thing special about the quick charges is the wattage?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, Quick Charge™ uses the data + and - pins to negotiate and supply different voltages (3.6 V to 20 V) and currents to charge quickly. Its different to using a standard high wattage 5v outlet.
Moto & Lenovo said:
Thank you for contacting Moto & Lenovo.
The Moto G5 Plus supports Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 (and Motorola TurboPower™). However, the Moto G5 does not. It comes with a 10W rapid charger, but this is not the same as Quick Charge (or TurboPower™).
This is a hardware limitation. Not a firmware issue. Even though the Snapdragon™ 430 is capable of supporting Quick Charge, the phone itself is not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
outrage_uk said:
No, Quick Charge™ uses the data + and - pins to negotiate and supply different voltages (3.6 V to 20 V) and currents to charge quickly. Its different to using a standard high wattage 5v outlet.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
leaves me a little lost then. If turbocharge is the same as quickcharge 2.0 then my charger that came with phone is not a turbocharge at all. It has a output rating of 5.2v.
Edit: didn't see last post as it was an old refresh I guess lol Didn't quite sink in when i seen rapid charge in the promo on there site.
I wish I did more research. I went for this phone for a budget Quick charge 64bit phone lol failed the other part was responsive and I still have that
trotter2000 said:
I wish I did more research. I went for this phone for a budget Quick charge 64bit phone lol failed the other part was responsive and I still have that
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly the same. I saw "rapid charging" on their website and assumed with the fact it has a Snapdragon 430 processor, it would support Quick Charge 3.0. No idea why they have chosen not to support it Never mind, it's still a decent enough slow charging phone running Android 7.1.2, for the money.
i just bought the mrs one for xmas and dont think its has a fast charger with it...
charger just says 5v 2ah like normal chargers?
AMD not only has great processors for desktops but it also has some of the best mobile processors or as they call APUs (Accelerated Processing Unit). Similar to Intel, AMD also offers high-end processors for gaming and workstations which have the ‘H’ suffix, while the low-power processors for thin and ultralight laptops have the ‘U’ suffix.
Naturally, if you are looking for the best battery life, the ‘U’ processor lineup is what you should be looking for. Considering AMD’s not-so-great history with laptop processors, I suggest that you either go for the new Ryen 5000 mobile processor or the Ryzen 4000.
Here are all the low-powered mobile processors under the AMD Ryzen 5000 series:
AMD Ryzen 7 5800U 8-core/16-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 7 5700U 8-core/16-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 5 5600U 6-core/12-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 5 5500U 6-core/12-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 3 5400U 4-core/8-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 3 5300U 4-core/8-threads 15W
Compared to Intel’s offerings, AMD offers up to 8-cores, 16-threads mobile processors that sip on just 15W of power. This is possible thanks to the company’s Zen 3 architecture that is based on the 7nm node. Notebooks with AMD Ryzen 5000 series are fairly new and are limited in number. You go also go for the Ryzen 4000 series as they also perform surprisingly well despite their low TDP rating.
AMD Ryzen 7 4800U 8-core/16-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 7 4700U 8-core/8-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 5 4600U 6-core/12-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 5 4500U 6-core/6-threads 15W
AMD Ryzen 3 4300U 4-core/4-threads 15W
Notably, the AMD Ryzen 7 4700U was quite a hit and is still regarded as one of the best options if you are planning to buy a multi-core, low-power processor on a laptop.
Ryzen 4000 series are much better upgrade than the previous 3000 series
Nice to have a list of laptops that use the latest amd u processors.
I recently sold a PC to a client with great specifications; I am talking 16GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM, 1TB SSD , AMD Ryzen 7 5800H processor and NVIDIA Geforce RTX 3070 8GB. Naturally, the first thing expected to be done by the PC is Gaming; sadly, it underperforms with CPU TDP limited at 15W on power and Refresh rates not going past 100Hz( it supports 144Hz).
This happens even at max settings on the NVIDIA control panel. What might be the issue? Anyone else undergoing through the same problem?