Timothy Green

Timothy Green is a financial journalist at The Motley Fool, a company founded in 1993 and dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through its premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation. Green covers technology companies such as Microsoft and Qualcomm in his reporting.

76%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.

Bias

90%

Examples:

  • The author seems to have a slight preference for Intel over Qualcomm in their reporting.

Conflicts of Interest

100%

Examples:

  • There are no clear conflicts of interest detected in the author's reporting.

Contradictions

88%

Examples:

  • The author acknowledges Intel's push for improved battery life with its upcoming Lunar Lake chips, while also noting that gaming performance on Qualcomm's chips is subpar compared to Intel and AMD.
  • The author mentions that Microsoft supported Qualcomm and its new Arm-based CPUs but also states that Snapdragon X PCs offer excellent performance and long battery life according to various reviews.

Deceptions

35%

Examples:

  • The author also implies that Qualcomm-powered laptops may face challenges in the gaming sector due to emulation struggles.
  • The author mentions that some games won't start at all, others have instability issues, and still others chug along at unacceptable frame rates when using Qualcomm's chips for emulation.

Recent Articles

Microsoft and Qualcomm's Partnership: Challenging Intel's Dominance with AI-Powered, Energy-Efficient PCs

Microsoft and Qualcomm's Partnership: Challenging Intel's Dominance with AI-Powered, Energy-Efficient PCs

Broke On: Wednesday, 03 July 2024 Microsoft and HP are embracing Qualcomm's energy-efficient Snapdragon X processors for new PCs, offering long battery life and improved software compatibility. However, limitations in productivity apps may slow adoption. Qualcomm's chips challenge Intel's dominance with power savings and AI capabilities, while Microsoft's Copilot PC exclusives offer text-to-image tools and live captions. Intel's Meteor Lake chips with NPUs are coming soon, as is AMD's Ryzen AI chips. The future of PCs hinges on AI and energy efficiency; Microsoft and Qualcomm lead, but Intel and AMD are close behind.
Microsoft's Surface Pro 11 and Laptop 7: A Game-Changing Shift to Arm Processors with Improved Performance and Longer Battery Life

Microsoft's Surface Pro 11 and Laptop 7: A Game-Changing Shift to Arm Processors with Improved Performance and Longer Battery Life

Broke On: Sunday, 30 June 2024 Microsoft's Surface Pro 11 and Laptop 7 mark a game-changing shift in the tech industry as they become the first flagship devices from Microsoft to exclusively use Arm processors, bringing an 'Apple Silicon moment' for Windows. With popular apps like Netflix, Kindle, Handbrake, Unity, VLC and Microsoft Office now available in native Arm versions and impressive performance improvements for emulated apps on the Snapdragon X Elite processor, these devices offer exceptional battery life and strong competition in the market. However, some apps like VPNs and older hardware devices may not run properly.