> Benchmarks from Qualcomm suggest that the new Snapdragon can not only catch up with the competition, but also clearly outperform Apple’s M2 SoCs whilst showing higher energy efficiency.<p>...<p>> Adreno GPU with 1.25 GHz<p>...<p>> The SoC is not suitable for high-end notebooks or gaming behemoths; it is more suited to business-class workhorses such as the Pulse or the InfinityBook Pro notebooks.<p>...<p>Sadly, everything I've read about the Snapdragon X Elite - despite their marketing hype of 'outperforms Apple!' - seems to suggest it is not really competitive with Apple.<p>For ML, the memory bandwidth is 136GB/s[0] - while e.g. an M2 Ultra is 800GB/s and a RTX 3090 is 900GB/s. The Snapdragon X Elite sits around the memory bandwidth of a Steam Deck (100GB/s)<p>For gaming, benchmarks[1] seem to suggest an RTX 3050 or M2 Max are 2x better.<p>Not to mention the Snapdragon X Elite won't be shipped for ~6 months, while Apple is already releasing M4 chipsets.<p>I'm still excited we're getting decent ARM hardware for Linux, though.<p>[0] <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1cwsvsk/16_gb_ram_and_npu_support_on_snapdragon_x/l4ynqzl/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1cwsvsk/16_gb_r...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://videocardz.com/newz/qualcomm-snapdragon-x-elite-adreno-gpu-performance-matches-amd-radeon-780m-in-gaming" rel="nofollow">https://videocardz.com/newz/qualcomm-snapdragon-x-elite-adre...</a>