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Qualcomm’s Snapdragon C chip eyes dirt-cheap laptops as MacBook Neo redraws budget lines

A $300 laptop that actually works? Qualcomm thinks it has the answer.

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Qualcomm Snapdragon C
Qualcomm

Budget laptops have always been a compromise. You either get a machine that struggles to keep up with your browser tabs or one that dies before lunch. And almost all of them feature a cheap plastic body. Qualcomm wants to change that with its new Snapdragon C Platform, a chip built specifically for entry-level laptops starting at $300.

Qualcomm says that the Snapdragon C is designed for students, families, and small businesses that need a reliable, everyday machine without breaking the bank. Devices powered by this chip will handle web browsing, video streaming, productivity apps, and video calls without a hitch. 

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It also packs an integrated NPU, which means even entry-level laptops will get some AI capabilities baked in.

Can it compete on the battery front?

Qualcomm is leaning hard into power efficiency with the Snapdragon C. The promise is all-day battery life in a cool, quiet design, which sounds almost too good for a $300 laptop. 

If Qualcomm delivers on this, it will be a big deal for students who are lugging their laptop chargers around all day. Acer, HP, and Lenovo are already on board, with devices expected to hit shelves later this year.

Why does this matter right now?

The timing is hard to ignore. Apple recently launched its budget MacBook Neo for $599, which students can get for only $499 with a student discount. Powered by an A18 Pro chipset, the MacBook Neo has taken the world by storm, even surprising Apple with its success

The laptop is flying off the shelf, as there’s no Windows laptop in sight that can deliver the same level of performance, build quality, and battery life at its price range. Thanks to AI gobbling up the world’s RAM supply, Windows laptops are seeing price increases left and right, which has further boosted MacBook Neo’s sales. 

It’s clear that Qualcomm is launching its Snapdragon C series chipset to power laptops that can compete with MacBook Neo, aiming to provide users with a Windows alternative. Whether it will be a success depends heavily on its OEM partners and the state of Windows 11 on ARM, which is only now beginning to emerge as a viable desktop operating system.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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