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Qualcomm’s new eight-core Snapdragon X Plus makes these Windows laptops cheaper

Qualcomm’s new eight-core Snapdragon X Plus makes these Windows laptops cheaper

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The Asus Vivobook S 15 and Dell Inspiron 14 now start at just $899 each.

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A silver laptop, partially opened, with a peach hue illuminating its keys and its Snapdragon X Plus badge, next to a small black square inset with a silver square representing the chip inside.
Image: Qualcomm

Qualcomm launched its first big wave of Windows laptops this summer for $999 and up, but a new, somewhat weaker chip could soon shave off at least $100. Today, the company is announcing its first eight-core Snapdragon X Plus chips, which will feature in a new Asus Vivobook S 15 and Dell Inspiron 14 that’ll retail for $899 each. The Asus is already available at Best Buy.

Acer, HP, Lenovo, and Samsung should also have new Snapdragon X Plus laptops coming soon, like the $999 Acer Swift Go 14 AI. A new 15-inch model of the Samsung Galaxy Book4 Edge is coming in October.

While the new Qualcomm chips have all the same features as the 10-core and 12-core models, they’re decidedly weaker in some ways, especially graphics. On average, they’ve got less than half the GPU power for games and other graphical apps. And while they all feature the same 45 TOPS of AI performance from their NPU, they’ve also got 12MB less CPU cache.

1.7 teraflops is a lot less than 4.6 teraflops. But the new chips have boost clocks.
1.7 teraflops is a lot less than 4.6 teraflops. But the new chips have boost clocks.
Image: Qualcomm

According to Qualcomm’s own internal benchmarks for the new eight-core chips (take that with a grain of salt), all that means they’re roughly 80 percent as capable as the company’s 12-core chips in the CPU realm and on par with the 10-core chips for productivity. But with the eight-core, those graphic scores are predictably cut in half.

The Qualcomm reviewer’s guide suggests these chips aren’t that much slower in the CPU realm at least.
The Qualcomm reviewer’s guide suggests these chips aren’t that much slower in the CPU realm at least.
Image: Qualcomm

Would you want to save money this way? I could definitely see it for entry-level laptop buyers, particularly if you’re actually saving $400, as the case might be for the Asus Vivobook S 15. That laptop originally cost $1,300 with the 12-core chip, but it’s just $900 with the eight-core, despite featuring the same big 70 watt-hour battery and 3K 120Hz OLED screen. The only other obvious sacrifice is half the storage, as you’ll get 512GB instead of 1TB.

But sales might make the pricing gap smaller than it appears: that 12-core Asus Vivobook S 15 is already on sale for $1,100 or lower, and Dell is already selling a 12-core model of its Inspiron 14 Plus for $899.

Asus is also announcing a Qualcomm-based creator laptop today, the $1,099 ProArt PZ13, which also has the same 3K OLED touchscreen and 70-watt hour battery but with a detachable keyboard and stylus support and is also already available at Best Buy today.

Dell also has a Latitude 5455 with the new chip and very similar specs to the Inspiron, but no pricing is available yet.

Qualcomm previously said its laptops would dip as low as the $700 mark in 2025.

Update, September 4th: Added other confirmed laptop manufacturers for the eight-core chip and Best Buy links for the now-available Asus laptops.