This post brought to you by Snapdragon by Qualcomm. All opinions are 100% mine.
If you’re one of those who watched the San Diego Chargers vs. the Baltimore Ravens games last week maybe you were also confused why the broadcaster named the home stadium as the Snapdragon Stadium. The main reason for this is that Qualcomm decided, for the meantime, to rename the stadium as an approach to endorse their Snapdragon processors and also to increase consumer awareness of what a Snapdragon processor is. The stadium was also renamed during the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl last December 21 and also by December 28 during the Bridgepoint Education Holiday Bowl.
The renaming of the stadium started last December 18 and will last for approximately 11 days from the time it was first renamed.
The Snapdragon processors by Qualcomm are the digital brains inside mobile devices made by top manufacturers like Samsung, LG, Nokia, and HTC. These processors help consumers do more on their mobile devices–such as watch HD video, play console-quality games and surf the Web–while maintaining the life of their battery for longer periods of time. What I like about the Snapdragon processor is that it takes mobile gaming to a whole new level with console-quality, high resolution, realistic 3D scenes and effects and these processors are found in more than 250 smartphones and tablets worldwide which I think is the best.
Snapdragon processors are categorized into three system classes, System 1 (S1), System 2 (S2) and System 3 (S3), these names denote performance and feature set:
For quick reference, here’s how each system differs,
S1 processors offer great performance and longer battery life for today’s mass market smartphones.
S2 processors are an excellent choice for high performance smartphones and tablets.
S3 processors are designed to offer 2x the graphics performance of the S2 and 4x the graphics performance of the S1. The S3 class of processors also features a dual core Scorpion CPU at speeds of up to 1.5Ghz per core.
To learn more about each Snapdragon category you can refer to qualcomm.com.





























