Qualcomm picks bad time to pitch a $300 laptop platform
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Qualcomm picks bad time to pitch a $300 laptop platform Systems based on Snapdragon C to target students, families, and small businesses
Dan Robinson Dan Robinson
Published thu 28 May 2026 // 14:30 UTC
Chip giant Qualcomm is launching new Snapdragon silicon aimed at entry-level laptops, right in the midst of a memory supply crunch that will make it very difficult for any vendors to hit the target $300 starting price.The San Diego-based biz is adding to its line-up of Arm-based system-on-chip (SoC) processors with the Snapdragon C platform. This is designed to power entry-tier laptops targeting buyers such as students, families, and small businesses, with a starting price stated as "about $300 or so."Qualcomm started its push into the Windows laptop market a couple of years ago, with its Snapdragon X Elite and Snapdragon X Plus chips. Many of these were priced around $600. It was aided by Microsoft, which was trying to promote the "Copilot+ PC" brand for Windows 11 systems that feature a built-in neural processor (NPU) for AI tasks.
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The firm unveiled new additions, the Snapdragon X2 Plus chips for budget and mainstream systems, at the CES trade show earlier this year.
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"With Snapdragon C, we're now raising the bar of what budget-conscious laptop buyers should expect," said senior director of product management Mandar Deshpande, promising all-day battery life, lag-free performance, and fanless, cool-running designs. Qualcomm is curiously tight-lipped about the chip's specifications, declining to disclose CPU core count or GPU details. Deshpande confirmed only that the cores are a custom design based on the Kryo architecture from its smartphone chips rather than the Oryon cores used in its higher-end laptop silicon. MORE CONTEXT Qualcomm is determined to cut a slice out of Intel's PC pie with latest Snapdragon chips
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A full spec sheet is expected and may land as early as next week when vendor partners unveil products at Computex in Taipei. Snapdragon C includes an integrated NPU, though Deshpande said this "is not built to scale up to the Copilot+ requirements," something budget buyers are unlikely to lose sleep over. They may, however, lose sleep over memory prices. DRAM component costs have more than quadrupled since this time last year, and some analysts predict entry-level systems could effectively disappear as a result."Because the price of memory is increasing so much, vendors lose the ability to provide entry-level PCs – those below about $500," Gartner research director Ranjit Atwal told The Register.On the $300 price point, Deshpande claimed that "everyone is interested in buying laptops at this price.""There is a lot of momentum still in the lower tier price points, given how things are turning out for the memories and everything. So it's a great opportunity for Qualcomm to bring all the great technology that we have built for the Snapdragon X, and again make it a purpose-built platform for the entry user."
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That said, Qualcomm doesn't set the price of systems – the PC makers do. Deshpande said that products from HP, Lenovo, and Acer will be "launching soon," and are expected to hit shelves later this year. ®
laptops dram arm snapdragon c systems qualcomm
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