Unisoc 5G SoC Compared
| SoC | eMMC | UFS | U | P | E | GHz | GPU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T9100 | 5.1 | 3.1 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 2.7 / 2.3 / 2.3 | G57 MC4 |
| T8100 | 5.1 | 3.1 | 4 | 4 | 2.2 / 2.2 | G57 MC4 | |
| T8200 | 5.1 | 3.1 / 2.2 | 2 | 6 | 2.3 / 2.1 | G57 MC2 | |
| T8300 | 5.1 | 2.2 | 2 | 6 | 2.2 / 2.0 | G57 MC2 |
| SoC | eMMC | UFS | U | P | E | GHz | GPU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T9100 | 5.1 | 3.1 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 2.7 / 2.3 / 2.3 | G57 MC4 |
| T8100 | 5.1 | 3.1 | 4 | 4 | 2.2 / 2.2 | G57 MC4 | |
| T8200 | 5.1 | 3.1 / 2.2 | 2 | 6 | 2.3 / 2.1 | G57 MC2 | |
| T8300 | 5.1 | 2.2 | 2 | 6 | 2.2 / 2.0 | G57 MC2 |
Nicely scouted, but it is also possible that the term eMMC is being use loosely.
Hope we can get some clarity on that soon. ![]()
Yes, it is possible. Meanwhile… The Jolla × Reeder C2 (powered by a Unisoc T7200) uses eMMC 5.1 storage.
Jolla should select the hardware to have best possible control over the software for it. I currently use the Volla Quintus and when mobile data and WLAN is off over night, the system uses only 0.3 %/h of the battery. Since it’s a Mediatek CPU, power consumption increases massively with data connection. Android is much more power efficient, presumably because of the extended software possibilities for the hardware. There are example threads with Xperia devices in this forum discussing this relationship, e.g.
Jolla should select the internal hardware to get best possible control over it.
“Jolla should select the hardware to have best possible control over the software for it. I currently use the Volla Quintus and when mobile data and WLAN is off over night, the system uses only 0.3 %/h of the battery.”
100% Agree. On my C2 they have archieved 0.13%/h which is impressive
Indeed it is. Is the number similar when battery charge is within 20 and 80%? When battery is close to full measurement can be distorted a bit.
Reading an article at Gizmodo about a new trend in headsets. Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) but wired.
The Belkin unit mentioned in the article will be available in October at $35.
The unit needs digital signal processing, thus needing power supplied by a USB-c socket.
I think this wired ANC headset trend is a good reason to have two USB-c sockets on the next gen Jolla phone.
Maybe it would be a good thing to have branded wired ANC headsets available in the Jolla store?
Please do video output through the USB C, I know it’s depends on CPU rather than the other hardware, that’s why I writing it here. Screen mirroring it’s slow. Or make it work with xreal or other video glasses. Please I wanna use my phone as a computer ![]()
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When the smartphones started making I thought it will be a pc in the pocket, not just a multimedia social thing, but a powerful Swiss knive. Please, please, please let it happen ![]()
Fully agree, thanks @Th34rch1t3ct, your post is out of my heart.
NFC is not only going to be used for making payments or using public transport. For example: I just used NFC for identification (‘attestatie de vita’ for my pension). Now this (reading the NFC chip on my ID-card) is only an option besides the paper option, presented as safer, easy and comfortable. But any time soon for more and more vital privacy risky procedures using NFC could be the only option. That is the trend, excluding anyone not ‘going with the flow’ without useful support for failing to do so.
I think including NFC-feature is ‘useful’ for the same reasons as Sailfish OS itself.
I hope we can easily agree that NFC functionality in Sailfish OS should be included because (whether we like it or not) there otherwise is a risk in future this could ‘feature’ could suddenly be vital. We do not know enough about where exactly things are going, even in ‘near’ future!
I’m late in this topic, but personally I don’t buy anything new from Jolla till they fix GPS issues on Jolla C2. Rationale - I don’t need one more not functional device ‘for shelf’ based on outdated linux / Qt with unclear future and still not OSS (although situation getting better in this area, keep fingers crossed)
and audio output too ![]()
Having two USB-c sockets (one OTG and one host-only) would allow (among other things) an external dock for PowerDelivery, Gigabit Ethernet, 4K VideoOut, active- and passive sound out, keyboard and mouse, etc.
A full setup of stuff could be waiting at home (or at work) with just one cable to connect.
If you only need to connect one cable you also only need one port for that…
Correct. …if you want to carry the dock everywhere you go.
Agree, but this port should support full support for full featured USB3 dock: HDMI, cable network, USB keyboard, mouse, stick, soundcard…
Many monitors have a dock build in nowadays so you can plug any weird usb stuff there. On a laptop multiple usb ports make sense cause you need to connect sticks etc.
If you work with a monitor that has ports you don’t need to connect stuff to your phone.
Correct. …but I would prefer to have the dock as a separate unit in case I do need to travel with it. Still… Separate or built-in would simply be a choice.
Then again you connect the one usb-c to the dosck which has all sort of connection options. I struggle to find a usecase for dual usb-c ports on a phone.