Not exact matches
Even
with the Wii's
weak hardware, it produced quite a few excellent games.
With RIM giving up on upgrading the Storm series OS and their
weak hardware offerings of late... I'm moving on and ordered my Droid X.
Amazon in comparison, while it may have
weaker hardware, has a world - class returns and customer service system that has never failed me in around 8 years of shopping regularly
with them.
The thing here is that, for a videogame company like Nintendo to leapfrog into what they considered a blue ocean, they had to make a system
with a price tag attractive to the consumer they were trying to reach (not the dedicated enthusiast they no longer wanted to cater to), which naturally meant the system was bound to have
weaker hardware in comparison to other systems actually being made to cater to traditional gamers.
Gamers wondered if it would be a watered - down version,
with certain penalties on the graphics department to account for the Switch's comparably
weaker hardware than rival machines.
We're not in the NES era where the
weak soundchip limited us to chiptunes, nor the SNES / Mega Drive one where MIDI songs
with samples were the only thing that could work on the console
hardware.
I think they sell because they are cheap, and some deal
with side effects and
weak hardware and some probably go back to a PC.
Along
with its impressive
hardware however, there are a few
weak spots and a couple rough edges in its current software release.
Low light performance, from both the front and back cameras, is
weaker than I expected from a camera loaded
with low - light friendly
hardware too.
But if Apple has shown one thing time and again
with every iPhone generation, it's that optimization of
hardware and software matter just as much — if not more — than the hard numbers of which phone has more RAM, which is why Apple's phones tend to perform so well, even
with comparatively
weaker hardware.
Even ARM
hardware that's a lot
weaker on the spec sheet than the Snapdragon 835 Samsung's using
with DeX.
Android Go is essentially a lightweight version of Android geared towards devices
with limited RAM (512 MB to 1 GB) and
weaker hardware in general.