While normally one might expect high end phones to get the latest and greatest features first, this time we see a bit of a surprising reversal. The Desire 510 is HTC's first 64-bit phone, and the first announced device with Snapdragon 410. For those that aren't familiar with Snapdragon 410, it has four Cortex A53 CPU cores running at 1.2 GHz, along with an Adreno 306 GPU which suggests that it is a mild modification of the current Adreno 305 GPU that we see in the Snapdragon 400. Overall, this should make for a quite fast SoC compared to Snapdragon 400, as Anand has covered in the Snapdragon 410 launch announcement.
While it may seem strange that ARMv8 on Android phones is first to appear on a budget smartphone, it's quite easy to understand how this happened. Looking at Qualcomm's roadmap, the Snapdragon 810/MSM8994 is the first high-end SoC that will ship with ARMv8, and is built on a 20nm process. As 20nm from both Samsung and TSMC have just begun appearing in shipping chips, the process yield and production capacity isn't nearly as mature as 28nm LP, which is old news by now.
Other details include:
- SoC MSM8916 1.2 GHz Snapdragon 410
- RAM/NAND 1 GB RAM, 8GB NAND + microSD
- Display 4.7” FWVGA (854x480)
- Network 2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Qualcomm MDM9x25 UE Category 4 LTE)
- Dimensions 139.9 x 69.8 x 9.99mm, 158 grams
- Camera 5MP rear camera, .3MP/VGA FFC
- Battery 2100 mAh (7.98 Whr)
- OS Android 4.4 with Sense 6
- Connectivity 802.11b/g/n + BT 4.0, USB2.0, GPS/GNSS, DLNA
- SIM Size MicroSIM