Just a few weeks ago, a video featuring the LeEco X920 had leaked, and now, images showing a hands on of the X920 have surfaced. This comes after the launch of the Le Pro 3 AI Edition.
The X920 is supposedly a high end variant, but judging from its specs, it seems like a device that was supposed to be for 2016. It is powered by the Snapdragon 820 chipset coupled with 4GB RAM, 64GB internal memory. As seen in the video, it features a dual camera setup in the rear with a 22.5 megapixel sensor, and an 8 megapixel front camera with flash, dual SIM support, 3700mAh battery and a massive 6.3 inch , 2K display. It does not do justice to the flagship title as far as the specs go, with most flagships using the Snapdragon 835 chipset.
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The device is also shown to run on Android 6.0 Marshmallow with LeEco’s EUI 5 on top. Considering its screen size, this device falls under the phablet category. But the battery does not seem sufficient for a device like this. It is not known as to how it will perform in the real world tests.
Do you think the Snapdragon 820 is the right choice in 2017? Let us know in the comments below.
Yup, I think sd820/821 is the right choice: it has more power than you’ll ever need, it has nice power management, and it probably is far cheaper than sd835 and surely more avaible than the latter due to samsung’s shenanigans… i would totally consider a device with sd820/821if it had a low price, a good camera and audio, and a big battery… better spend those extra money in the multimedia department rather than having the latest soc “just because”, considering you’ll never notice that extra power unless you run antutu
Thank you, too much idiots wants the latest and greatest and are acting like apps got so much more demanding over the last year/months for more “power” and nobody is fighting for power efficiency which is more practical
Well that “latest & greatest (S835)” should be much more power efficient (semi custom A73 core’s & 10nm FinFET). Regarding SoC manufacturer’s they will keep pushing MHz so it’s up to you to restrict it & gain power efficiency.
And with the small batteries these flagships have the difference in efficiency is negligible to f more flagships had 4k mAh or 5k then users would see more worthwhile differences, and yet still I bet the 625/626 will run laps around the 835
Thing ain’t that simple. Those are weak SoC’s & when you have more possibilities you can tune better. Both S82x & S62x are losers regarding overlay performance per Vat as they both lack opposite cores. I can tune a S652 to be as fast regarding CPU use as the S821, even faster with heavy SMP & I can tune it up to be more power efficient than S625 while retaining better performance.
https://forum.xda-developers.com/mi-max/development/power-performance-kernel-tuning-tweaks-t3584897
Of course it’s not that simple but you would think the efficiency would be this big between both seeing a flagship soc should be the latest and best chip set
The A53 & A72~73 core’s are lot different & they both have their advantages and disadvantages regarding both performance & efficiency tasks & they both largely differ regarding type (integer or floating point) & SMP behaviour when using a same type (for instance VFP SMP4 on a A53 will perform about 35% faster while consuming less power than on the A72’s or one A72 is about 80% faster in integer tasks than A53 & integer tasks scale bad in SMP) which determines the best candidate for particular task. Through is you can’t explicitly direct them but thing you can do is ensure best possible operation conditions along with environment. Both S82x & S62x lack the other tipe of core’s so they aren’t really that good design regarding much things. What is the same regardless of core’s & don’t differ much with used lithography process are the base material properties in this case silicone & each & every manufacturer is pushing quartz oscillator rate (frequency) much above any sustainable limits. If you correct those along with harmonising it (as currently possible) you get power/performance optimisations & that’s how a combo SoC (S652) based on the old lithography (HPM 28nm planar) becomes faster & less power hungry than a true octa A53 one based on lithography (14nm FinFET) that spends roughly only half the power of older one.
You got it right brother. My Cool 1 Dual is using SD 652 and still performing greatly. I want to upgrade but not to SD 835. I’m definitely going for 820/821 in my next phone.
Hate to brake it up to you but S82x is very north from power/performance efficiency.
I’m happy with the processor, I just really wish the battery was bigger. I am due to get my Leeco X829 soon with 6gb of ram and 128gb rom. Judging by the reviews, the battery life is crap and this phone has a bigger screen. EUI isn’t well optimized either
Battery life on x829 isn’t crap, if u fancy miui, try it, getting more than 6 hours sot here
Lol MiUI & power usage optimization’s are even more far apart (not optimised frequency scaling & lack of any hot plug) thing all do you can’t really do much regarding S82x…
Same thing i hear all the times but i get more juice from my phone compared to some oda few OS i have used. Real world usage matters
It maters also what that usage leaves as a experience. MiUI kills all backgrounds tasks with it’s memory optimisations which make it very limiting, same can be said for “MiUI optimisations” it’s also naturally performance diminishing even without app forced reputedly cold start taken in consideration but it can save battery (you can play with both under developer options & changing either will need a reboot to apply changes all do I don’t recommend you to turn entirely memory optimisations without phone which has 4GB of RAM) along with that it’s very heavy regarding UI & UX but smooth enough in usage all do all present animation (a lots of them) actually do make it look slow. Second part that is broken in MiUI (probably beyond repair) is a interaction with notifications API’s which really badly translates on the user experience (especially for those who heavy use social apps and chats) which unfortunately can not be corrected no matter what you do.
Regarding power/performance optimisations for Xiaomi phones(‘s) applicable & to all other one’s with presented kernel infrastructure (regardless of OEM’s) let’s take it from a first hand especially regarding real usage;
https://forum.xda-developers.com/mi-max/development/power-performance-kernel-tuning-tweaks-t3584897
In short there are much better ways to get there and beyond that what MiUI can achieve.
Thanks I will definitely give it a try regardless of battery performance. I am keen to try MIUI on it.
Depending on the price, I totally will consider buying this. My only problem will be the battery performance. If it’s good, I’ll likely buy this. My Cool 1 Dual gives me an average of 7hrs SOT. Anything less won’t be too conducive for me.