Qualcomm just announced the QCC5100 - a chipset
aimed squarely at true wireless earphones, like Apple's AirPods. In fact,
Qualcomm has nonchalantly mentioned during its presentation that the Bluetooth
5.0 system-on-a-chip will deliver "25% better battery life than the most
popular true wireless headset on the market today." Since that title goes
to the AirPods, this is a stone thrown in Apple's garden by a chip giant which
is currently in a patent feud with the team from Cupertino.
In the press release, however, the new silicon is
actually claimed to offer "up to 65%" less power consumption than
previous solutions, which obviously are anything else than Apple's W1 chip in
the AirPods. All in all, this means that earbuds with the new gear should be
able to deliver at least 6-8 hours of listening time on a charge, instead of
the current 4-6 range, which is pretty svelte.
Not only does the new chippery by Qualcomm offer
"low power wake word detection," but it's claimed to bring a better
battery draw distribution between voice calls and music streaming, too. Inside,
a 120 MHz digital signal processor (are we still talking about earbuds?) makes
things like voice recognition and noise cancellation work faster in tandem with
your Alexa, Siri or Google Assistant of choice.
Earphone designs with the new QCC5100 kit should be
hitting the airwaves by mid-year, so even the best of Bluetooth wireless buds
unveiled at CES aren't able to take advantage just yet. Qualcomm said it has
provided reference boards to manufacturers already, but which ones are on the
take remains to be seen.
