Google’s first smartwatch features Samsung’s Exynos 9110 chip (System LSI) on 10nm technology, which was introduced nearly five years ago and debuted with the Samsung Galaxy Watch. Google’s new Pixel Watch 2 is saying goodbye to Samsung’s Exynos chip, according to a new leak.
According to 9To5Google, the Google Pixel Watch 2 will be powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 Gen 1 chip, powered by a 4nm process (which allows for longer battery life compared to the Exynos 9110), It has four Cortex-A53 CPU cores at 1.7GHz, a Cortex-M55 coprocessor, and an Adreno A702 GPU at 1GHz.
The change reportedly gives the Google Pixel Watch 2 more than 24 hours of use with AoD normally turned on, and more than two days of use in conservative battery mode. The current Google Pixel Watch lasts about 24 hours with AoD turned off.
In contrast, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 is expected to feature the Exynos W980 chip, a slight improvement over the Exynos W920 chip. As a result, Google’s Pixel Watch 2 is expected to be more powerful and efficient than Samsung’s next smartwatch, thanks to a more energy-efficient chip (two more CPU cores) and Wear OS 4 optimisation.
The report also claims that the Google Pixel Watch 2 uses the same health sensor as the Fitbit Sense 2, and is expected to support an accelerometer, barometer, compass, and ECG. Ecg), GPS, gyroscope, heart rate monitor, skin temperature sensor, sleep tracker, SpO2 blood oxygen monitoring sensor, and pressure tracking (all day) are expected to launch with the Pixel 8 line of phones later this year.