Qualcomm has expanded its application partnerships to include Moises App, DJay Pro, Steinberg Cubase, and Capture One to take down Apple's supremacy in the art world.
Qualcomm's diversification into automotive, IoT, and AI sectors is driving revenue growth, boosted by on-device AI and solid financial performance. See more here.
Internal discussions and court documents reveal that Arm has been exploring these strategies since 2019. CEO Rene Haas has been a vocal advocate for change, expressing frustration with the company’s reliance on major customers and pushing for greater control over its technology.
Arm Holdings is developing plans to increase prices by up to 300% and has discussed manufacturing its own chips.
It licenses the intellectual property that Apple, Qualcomm, Microsoft and others use to design their chips, charging a small royalty for each chip produced with Arm technology. Despite its key ...
Nvidia forms a trio with ARM and Mediatek. Together, they are obviously preparing an all-round attack, summarizes Mark Mantel.
We see potential for Qualcomm in 2025 with Samsung partnership, but Apple's 5G modems could impact revenue. Read more on QCOM stock here.
Qualcomm is lining up the Snapdragon X against Intel’s ( INTC) Core 5 120U processor, which is also used to power mid-range PCs. Overall, the company says its Snapdragon X offers better performance per watt than the competing Intel chip and is better suited for AI tasks.
The server CPU market has long been dominated by Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) and AMD (NASDAQ: AMD). Both companies make chips based on the x86 architecture. While there are other types of CPUs used for specialized purposes -- think IBM mainframes -- x86 reigns supreme in the data center.
This year is possibly going to be the year of thin phones. As buzz builds over Samsung's Galaxy S25 Slim and Apple's rumored iPhone 17 Air,
In the high-tech universe, there is a single common road that top-flight companies like Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM), Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO),
This emulation works well most of the time, but not all the time. This is the biggest problem with Qualcomm's PC chips, and it's likely a deal breaker for many potential customers. PC games are particularly problematic, with popular titles having various issues running on Qualcomm devices.