I already said why it could potentially do it...but you choose to be a troll instead. Current X86 PC laptops don't perform that well unplugged; the loss of performance is massive, they are not even close to a MacBook in that regard, they must lose a lot of performance to not drain the battery too fast. That's simply
the most realistic disruption that you can expect. I'm sorry if you find it disappointing, but it is what it is. And again, that's assuming that Qualcomm didn't feed the press a bunch of manipulated data.
Also, Qualcomm marketing has been clear that they're going for high performance, past news also revealed that those Qualcomm laptops are going to be quite expensive. It was already established that they aren't interested at all in the low-end market. It's meant to be used in premium laptops, and they've been clear about that since the beginning. (But they might spectacularly fail if the rumours are true)
So, if you followed the news, you would have already known the answer to that question. (
Yes, that question is the one that caught my attention the most. The 100$ segment is the segment that's always been the most neglected, if you weren't making a joke and expect a billionaire corporation to care and make waves in that segment, then you are in for a world of pain )
My"corporate PR" is just how the market currently works. Haven't you noticed that the low-end CPU/GPU market has never been as bad as it is today? The low end is either a massively cut down version of old silicon, or a CPU full of e-cores. And according to Darmok, that's an awful experience to have on Windows. The low-end on Windows is basically a dead market. Even the Surface go who was supposed to be a cheap sub-400$ PC ended up being a rather mediocre 699$ computer.
Even beyond the PC, there's a tendency right now in tech to focus on the high-end and midrange, the low-end is generally unexciting beyond a few niches Chinese stuff. Big corporation tends to do massive price cut on old products and they're done. Here's your low end.
The fact that you didn't see my post as useful, is ultimately down to the
reality that there's really
nothing mind-blowing to expect beside better performance for watt.
Unlike QC I'm trying to be real here, and don't oversell the AI stuff. TSMC and ASML are not really trying to enable cheaper computers, regular windows will never be a lean OS, and people absolutely hate any cut down version of windows, which could run on weak silicon. Expecting a 100$ Windows device to run well is akin to expecting Nintendo to release their games on PC. It won't happen, and they aren't interested to make it happen either.
notebookcheck load test is a full GPU + CPU benchmark running in a loop until the battery dies with the screen at max brightness. They don't test performance on battery, sadly. It's pretty much in the same ballpark as many windows laptop without losing any performance. The biggest outlier is that zenbook, but we don't know how it performs. So in the best case, a PC laptop can last twice as long, but according to puget system, it is also often thrice as slow at executing a heavy task. So I'm not sure with poison is the worst here, when the MacBook is otherwise beating anything of the same performance class when websurfing or during video playback.
I don't own a MacBook btw, my laptop is a PC. And beyond some light photo editing/2D graphics, it just can't keep up unplugged. If I want to render something, I have to go home or find a plug, otherwise it'll be so slow, the battery will take a hit anyway. I, for one, don't think that the PC makers need to be pampered on that aspect. They must figure out a way to keep more performance unplugged.
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On another note, how come unplugged performance benchmark of laptops are surprisingly hard to find?