Battery performance S7 Exynos Vs Snapdragon

Mrrikki

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2014
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Now a lot of us guys in the UK have recieved our Exynos S7s I am interested to know if the battery performance is better or worse than the Snapdragon 820 the guys in the US have.

I am away with work traveling a lot on public transport the rest of this week so I am hoping to get a good idea on the weekend when I am back and under normal use age conditions for me.

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I think very few people would have both devices to compare.

Sent from my Verizon Samsung Galaxy Note 5
 
Sorry I meant as in comparing different people's experiences I know the chances of anyone having both is very low.

Posted via the Android Central App
 
Comparing battery performance across even the same model is hard enough... Never mind two different SOCs.

If I were a betting man, is say the Qualcomm is better. Qualcomm's custom core designs have always been top notch... And they put a lot of r&d into the Kryo core design in the 820.
 
Sorry I meant as in comparing different people's experiences I know the chances of anyone having both is very low.

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Different people use phones differently under different situations... Not sure how much this would help with regards to what battery life you would get
 
Just delete the thread please mods as it would seem pointless in reflection.

Posted via the Android Central App
 
Well, I wouldn't go quite that harsh... I mean, there is a lot of buzz around the performance differences of the two chipsets.... The problem has a lot of elements though:

1) Those battery tests you see on websites? I think they are utter rubbish. They might be better than nothing, but that's about it. I have yet to own a device whose performance, good OR bad, falls in line with the expectations of those tests. The tests only show how that phone performs on that test and that test alone. So if someone bought a phone with the expectation of running that exact battery test all day long, and nothing else. well, then they'd know what they are going to get. Everyone else? Don't put much stock in them.

2) And even if someone was to have owned both phones, it is extremely hard to duplicate the usage between the two enough to draw conclusions. And even then, their conclusions sort of dovetail with problem #1 above... they really only apply to their own particular usage. The software that powers these things is extremely dynamic when it comes to power usage.... so dynamic that it's near impossible to run a single test on a single phone. You really have to look at an aggregate of a bunch of people's usage to see trends.

I know a couple of people who were mirror images of each other... one owned a Nexus 6P and unloaded it for a Note 5, and other went in the opposite direction. Why? Both said their original phones had poor battery life... and both are just as pleased with their NEW phone, praising said battery. The person touching the screen is substantially more important than the lump of lithium ion battery behind it.
 

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