Yeah, sorry, no real news.
The obvious assumption is an A9600 based Xperia Play "PlayStation" phone late next year, but ST-E of course gives a "no comment" to the question. Sony Ericsson is a big customer for them, though.
http://www.itproportal.com/2011/03/31/exclusive-st-ericsson-integrate-nfc-features-its-platforms/
Considering it's a gaming phone, the GLBenchmark scores for the first Play don't indicate it'll be an exceptional performer in Android games. Higher frame rates would actually matter to the target demographic of a game phone, another good reason for SE to choose ST-E's chip next time around.
On the matter of quad A9 versus dual A15, ST-E said their pick yielded "higher and more predictable peak performance and energy efficiency". nVidia will be moving on to Tegra 4 anyway by then, so I doubt there'll be debate.
http://blog.stericsson.com/blog/2011/02/application-processors/who-needs-all-that-speed/
As for the marketing of the next generation of application processors, all this GFLOPs talk will be lending itself to a lot of GPGPU/OpenCL PR when it comes to the mobile market.
The obvious assumption is an A9600 based Xperia Play "PlayStation" phone late next year, but ST-E of course gives a "no comment" to the question. Sony Ericsson is a big customer for them, though.
http://www.itproportal.com/2011/03/31/exclusive-st-ericsson-integrate-nfc-features-its-platforms/
Considering it's a gaming phone, the GLBenchmark scores for the first Play don't indicate it'll be an exceptional performer in Android games. Higher frame rates would actually matter to the target demographic of a game phone, another good reason for SE to choose ST-E's chip next time around.
On the matter of quad A9 versus dual A15, ST-E said their pick yielded "higher and more predictable peak performance and energy efficiency". nVidia will be moving on to Tegra 4 anyway by then, so I doubt there'll be debate.
http://blog.stericsson.com/blog/2011/02/application-processors/who-needs-all-that-speed/
As for the marketing of the next generation of application processors, all this GFLOPs talk will be lending itself to a lot of GPGPU/OpenCL PR when it comes to the mobile market.