Skip to main content

Qualcomm just squashed its own desktop ambitions

Qualcomm's CEO presenting Snapdragon X Elite CPUs at Computex 2024.
Qualcomm

Qualcomm has been on a tear with its Snapdragon X Elite CPUs in Copilot+ laptops, but the company is struggling to expand beyond the initial lineup. Just days after the first orders arrived, Qualcomm has abruptly canceled its Snapdragon Dev Kit for Windows and promised refunds to developers who had ordered the mini PC.

We first heard about the Snapdragon Dev Kit in May, when Qualcomm announced it alongside the release of Copilot+ laptops. It was a part of Qualcomm’s ambitions on desktop Windows PCs, and Windows PCs more broadly, as it would allow developers to toy around with the most powerful Snapdragon X Elite CPU available — the X1E-00-1DE, which isn’t available on any consumer device and has over 100 watts of power at its disposal.

Recommended Videos

May turned into June, and finally, in July, orders for the kit went live with retailer Arrow. YouTuber Jeff Geerling placed an order then, with promised that the dev kit would show up the next day. It didn’t. The shipping timeline slipped into September, and it looks like Geerling was one of the first to get a dev kit at all. Just two weeks after getting the device, Geerling received an email from Arrow:

“The Developer Kit product comprehensively has not met our usual standards of excellence and so we are reaching out to let you know that, unfortunately, we have made the decision to pause this product and the support of it, indefinitely.”

In the comments, multiple users said they received the same email on the same day, or within a few days of, the dev kit showing up in the mail. Geerling already had a chance to test out the dev kit and found it surprisingly capable, though disappointing as a developer-only product. The intent of a developer kit like this is to give hardware to software developers in order to make apps for Windows on Arm as Qualcomm tries to court developers to bring apps from x86 over to Arm.

Snapdragon X Elite Dev Kit: The CoPilot-est PC, tested

It’s not clear why Qualcomm made the move. In June, the company made it clear that it has ambitions far beyond laptops, and the developer kit was a step in that direction. Maybe Qualcomm struggled to get its chips under control in a high-performance setting, or perhaps the cost of producing the kit wasn’t worth it to the company. Regardless of the reason, the cancellation is a major setback for the company.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
I regret buying the iPad Pro. This surprising Windows tablet showed me why
Asus ProArt PZ13 sitting atop an iPad Pro.

I’ve been an iPad-as-a-computer guy ever since Apple put the M1 silicon inside the iPad Pro. Earlier this year, I dropped $1,800 and got the new iPad Pro with the whole accessory kit in tow.

I wish I had the patience to wait and pick the Asus ProArt PZ13 instead. In doing so, I would have saved myself a cool $800, enough to buy a decent laptop, or even the lovely M4 Mac mini for my desk, and lived in peace.

Read more
The 5 Mac apps that keep me from moving to Windows
The side profile of the MacBook Pro M4.

This year will long be remembered as the year Windows PC makers fought back. Qualcomm first kicked off the AI PC era with the Snapdragon X Elite, and then Intel responded with the Lunar Lake platform.

For the first time nearly a decade, I've found myself tempted to return to Windows. But there's still one problem: the app gap.

Read more
Macs need Face ID, but not if it’s like Windows Hello
Someone using a MacBook Pro M4.

I love my MacBook Pro, but the fact that it's gone this long without Face ID still boggles the mind. The feature first came to iPhones in 2017, while Windows Hello facial authentication kicked off in 2015. That means we're likely going into 2025 with MacBooks being a full decade behind Windows laptops.

So yes, on one hand, Macs are in desperate need of Face ID. On the other hand, based on how Windows Hello has played out on even the best laptops running Windows, I have one big concern about how it might be implemented.
The problem with Windows Hello

Read more