To anchor this transition, the chipmaker unveiled the Snapdragon Reality Elite platform, aimed specifically at mixed reality glasses. The new architecture promises significant performance gains, including a 160% increase in NPU power compared to previous iterations. This capacity allows for the local execution of a 3-billion-parameter language model at 45 tokens per second, ensuring responsive AI interaction without cloud dependency. The hardware supports 4.4K per-eye resolution at 90 fps, a technical refinement intended to mitigate the eye strain often associated with prolonged headset use.
Beyond raw processing power, Qualcomm is lowering entry barriers for hardware startups through its Scalable Turnkey AI-Ready Toolkit (START). This program provides a combination of hardware modules, software stacks, and reference designs—ranging from audio-camera setups to binocular displays—to accelerate product development. Early partners include eyewear manufacturers Inspecs and TitanFlex-owned O’Neill. By positioning its silicon as the essential foundation for these diverse form factors, Qualcomm aims to capture the market as developers move toward wearable AI agents that require constant, real-world context.

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