6 reasons Google Tensor chip can be a worry for Qualcomm
Technical Deepak

Qualcomm lost a small but an 'important’ customer
Google may not have created much of a flutter in the smartphone market, but it does have a loyal following. Pixel phones are known for their camera prowess and are among the awaited smartphones of the year. Google offering a phone that is powered by an SoC of its own design is loss of a key customer for Qualcomm.

Google Tensor adds one more player to the smartphone chip market, and one with deep pockets
Samsung and Apple, two of the biggest players in the smartphone market, make their own chips. While Apple iPhones only run on the company's own A-series chips, Samsung uses both Mediatek and Qualcomm chips along with its own Exynos line of SoC. Google's entry in the chip market adds one more player to the segment and one with big deep pockets. Chip manufacturing is a complex and expensive process, and the fact that Google is investing money and resources in it means that the company is serious about this.

Tensor offers Android smartphone makers opportunity to further build their relationship with Google
This may go both ways, but there is a chance that Google starts offering Tensor SoC to other Android OEMs. And both OS and SoC of the same company are likely to aid in integration and make software talk better with hardware. As Google's senior director for Google Silicon, Monika Gupta, said during the announcement. "Google Tensor allows us to push the limits of helpfulness in a smartphone, taking it from a one-size-fits-all piece of hardware into a device that’s intelligent enough to respect and accommodate the different ways we use our phones."


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