AFAIK there is only one quad core S4 Pro chip - the APQ8064.
You are right. Qualcomm offers two S4 Pro chips, but only the one you mentioned, which is intended for use in tablets, is actually a quad-core. I assumed too much.
Im still not sure I buy that HTC rumor, but it seems like its cone from multiple places. They were also the only ones to push to 1.5 GHz in the last round, so I guess we'll wait and see
For all the reasons we’ve discussed so far, I’m calling BS. I hope I won’t have to eat my words later...
There is also nothing suggesting that existing devices aren't powerful enough to handle WP8. In fact, they've said existing devices could run it but it'd just be a lot of work.
Yes, I know. For the past six months I’ve been trying to explain to German enthusiasts exactly that. It was a relief when Microsoft finally said so themselves. But why are you bringing this up?
Continuing the 7.X branch alongside the 8.X branch is a terrible idea because they are effectively two different operating systems without app compatibility. OS and Android devices will have compatibility between low and high end devices, it'd be foolish to expect to have any success without also meeting what is a pretty basic requirement.
But they are compatible! WP7 apps run perfectly well on WP8. Just the opposite doesn’t work, but that doesn’t work anywhere! W7 apps don’t run on XP. PS3 games don’t run on PS2. iOS 5 apps don’t run on iOS3 etc. etc. etc.
90% of all apps simply don’t need WP8 hardware. Developers will continue to target those apps at WP7.5.x which will also run on WP8. Developers making really fancy stuff and high-end games will obviously target WP8, but if that is what you’re into you will be getting a WP8 device anyway, so no problem there either. Since WP 7.5.x will be around for quite some time (more on that later), the WP7 app market won’t be drying up anytime soon.
I’ll go out on a limb and say this isn’t half as terrible as you think. We’re just not used to thinking about the smartphone market in this way because Google and Apple do it differently. What basic requirement is getting violated exactly?
No real word on St-Ericsson in a while, this was the last as far as I know
Yeah, I saw that too. Anyway, like I said, ST-Ericsson has “cried wolf” so many times since 2010, that I just ain’t buying it any longer... at least not until I see the wolf myself (an ST- Ericsson powered WP device).
If ST-Ericsson gets involved, it will be restricted to supplying SoC’s for WP7.5.1 (Tango) based devices. Nothing else.
Hopefully Microsoft will allow high and low end phones while keeping some platform standards. I do think they will loosen up on some stuff though.
IMHO, Microsoft has already done precisely that!
There is only one thing left Microsoft rigorously standardizes... the SoC (CPU and GPU). Microsoft must do this so developers know what performance characteristics their apps may rely on. Thanks to SoC standardization developers can optimize their apps for that specific hardware platform... that can make a huge difference... particularly in games. Finally, it also makes testing a hundred times more effective and much less costly, which should result in higher quality apps (on average) compared to android.
In all other regards, OEM’s can do more or less whatever they want. Low end WP8 devices will come with smaller screens, lower resolution displays, smaller batteries, cheaper materials, lower quality cameras (or none at all), less RAM, no SD card, etc, etc, etc. Higher end devices should have the opposite.
What I’m saying is that Microsoft has already found the right balance between flexibility and standardization. Fail to standardize that one last and most important thing... the SoC... and we can basically forget about standardization and "look forward" to becoming as fragmented as android is.
I have seen nothing suggesting that they will continue to release WP7.X devices outside of those that have already been announced. Nokia has suggested that they will continue to support their users with updates, but there hasn't been anything to suggest that 7.8 isn't the end of the road.
Well, consider this: Microsoft spent a good part of 2011 and much developer effort and treasure on WP7.5.1 (Tango). Most of the effort was made on Nokia’s behalf. For us Westerners, Tango was an uneventful, boring update to WP7.5. However, Tango is actually a new branch off of WP7.5... its own OS if you will. App developers now explicitly target either: WP7.5 (Mango), WP7.5.1 (Tango) or WP8 (Apollo), each of which place different restrictions on what hardware resources apps may or may not use. Microsoft also re-engineered large parts of their backed services to support these low end devices. But how many Tango based devices have come to market so far? Only one, the Nokia 610 (that I'm aware of). Now, how likely is it that Microsoft took all that upon themselves, a huge effort that was just recently completed, so Nokia could release just one measly device just before abandoning the WP7 line completely and jumping over to WP8?
I’m guessing we will see more Tango based Nokia’s after the first batch of WP8 devices come out. I'm also guessing you won't see any of them... unless you live in India or China that is.
I know this doesn’t prove anything. I could state that a higher-up at Nokia explained this to me, but such words are rarely worth the pixels required to display them.
Anyway, Paul Thurrott was the only credible source I could find who explains this issue in one of his older posts:
Windows Phone "Tango"
He doesn't explicitly state that we should expect new Tango devices well into 2013, but I think it can be implied. Make of it what you will.