Multi-core processors on desktops and laptops have been available for years. Even netbooks often have dual-core processors. In fact, you'd be hard pressed to find a single core computer today. Smartphones though are just now beginning to see the benefits of dual-core chips.

Ed Hansberry, Contributor

February 17, 2011

1 Min Read

Multi-core processors on desktops and laptops have been available for years. Even netbooks often have dual-core processors. In fact, you'd be hard pressed to find a single core computer today. Smartphones though are just now beginning to see the benefits of dual-core chips.Last year, I interviewed a member of Texas Instrument's OMAP 4 platform team on the benefits of symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) for smartphones. At Mobile World Congress this week, ARM had one of TI's OMAP 4 chips in its booth and they were demonstrating pretty much none of the benefits I had written about.

Power conservation, multithreaded apps and multitasking are interesting, but not dazzling. Running two operating systems at the same time however, on a phone, is amazing. The device, built to look like a phone only about ten times larger, had a TI OMAP 4 Cortex A9 architecture chip and it was running Android 2.3 and Ubuntu 10.04 simultaneously.

Now, in reality, no one would want to run two operating systems on their phone at the same time. The only multitasking the vast majority of people care about is using their phone while simultaneously driving. This demo though does point out the power of SMP processing.

Power consumption should be lower for equivalent performance. For a lot of apps, it may not make a big difference - after all, you can only read email and Twitter feeds so fast. For web browsing, video and games though, the different should be noticeable.

Dual-core is just the beginning. The article notes that Nvidia is working on quad-core processors that should ship in tablets this fall and in smartphones by the holiday season.

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