fierrotlepou
Member
And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
They still aren't. All phone manufacturers are robbing you with their margins.
The iPhone X is probably the best example of that. Apple couldn't get a great deal on the displays since Samsung makes 90% of OLED displays, so you get to pay the price.
And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
That is not a bad thing.And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
No, pay attention, Apple now has an absurd power advance.And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
What new features? Most of the new features on smartphones these days are just fancy gimmicks.They always say up to. A 22% bump is pretty good.
Yeah theyll be jerks and come out with new features that require more processing power. The nerve those folks have!
That's not how widening performance deltas work.And next year the Samsung S9 will be the fastest, and then September next year the iPhone 9 will be the fastest. Rinse and repeat...
https://www.tomsguide.com/us/iphone-8-benchmarks-fastest-phone,review-4676.html
More at the link. Apple's chip design is so far ahead of the competition it is not even funny. It cannot be long before they replace the intel chips in Macs with their own chips.
Apple have the best uarch on the planet ATM. People who've been following apple's SoC progress should not be surprised.
Except this year the s8 isn't even as fast as the Iphone 7, and maybe just about beats out the 6s..
What new features? Most of the new features on smartphones these days are just fancy gimmicks.
4K video on a tiny screen? What's the point?Yeah, like 4K video.
4K video on a tiny screen? What's the point?
What new features? Most of the new features on smartphones these days are just fancy gimmicks.
while nice, I do nothing on my phone that actually warrants all the extra power.
I'd imagine the iPhone X is even faster. It would be cool if you could hook up your phone to a monitor and run OSX, or a desktop version of IOS. That would sell me on an iPhone. But I doubt Apple will ever do it.
I do agree in general almost all phones are good enough, but in a thread about CPU performance it is weird for people to come in and try and minimize the improvements Apple gained since their last upgrade.
It is not illegal to praise the 'other guy's' phone...
I'd slow down there several paces.
So they went from 16nm to 10nm yet there's only about an 22% increase over the A10 and only 8% over the A10x single core in these first benchmarks. Multicore is a huge increase with the caveat that the previous models were shit.
No I am not doing anything "on purpose". 4K on a tiny screen is pointless.Are you doing this on purpose? Think.
No I am not doing anything "on purpose". 4K on a tiny screen is pointless.
No I am not shit-posting. We've reached a point where phones pack more power than the average user uses.I mean, do you not understand that this is literally taking your phone for granted? Even something as simple as Facebook would likely grind to a halt on an iPhone 4s or 4. Even just basic camera image signal processing takes advantage of a lot of hardware directly in the processors these days.
aka "the most basic tasks" take a surprising amount of computing power, all things considered, even if the actual task comes of as mundane or every day.
edit - ah, just shit posting... missed that.
No I am not shit-posting. We've reached a point where phones pack more power than the average user uses.
I am still confused about the relative price/perf between the 8 and the X. In theory it's a couple of hundred dollars more, but is it a couple of hundred dollars better? I'm in the market for an upgrade anyway, and I'm leaning towards the X in large part because it's "only" a couple of hundred bucks, but also the camera.
Am I doing it wrong?
There are these things called televisions.No I am not doing anything "on purpose". 4K on a tiny screen is pointless.
The 8.
Same SOC in both. A11 Bionic.
multicore was previously "shit" whereby "shit" you mean "competitive with qualcomm and samsung's SoCs that had twice (or more) as many cores because their single-core performance lead (arguably the single most important metric) has been comically far ahead of everyone else since 2013"
also, display resolution matters approximately absolutely nothing for geekbench
The X isn't out yet. But it runs the same silicon. No one knows if it runs at the same clockspeeds yet.The 8 is faster than the X? The hell?
A10X is a different class product -- it has a superior LLC setup. A10 to A11 is the fair comparison and the advancement is commendable -- when did Intel last deliver 22% over same-class subsequent gens? But sure, if top-sku is your thing then wait for A11X for X-class comparisons.I'd slow down there several paces.
So they went from 16nm to 10nm yet there's only about an 22% increase over the A10 and only 8% over the A10x single core in these first benchmarks. Multicore is a huge increase with the caveat that the previous models were shit.
Sure Apple are subject to the same diminishing advancements, but they are ahead of Intel in IPC now, and Intel are further ahead on the curve, so I don't see how they would catch up.For reference, the jump from 6(A9) to 7(A10) was 39% single core. Apple's numbers are good for Apple products but they are fastly running into the same walls that Intel/AMD find themselves at today. We need more detailed breakdowns, especially the synthetics that run at the same resolution to really gauge them. People also don't seem to realize that the S8 runs at a higher resolution and a lower clock speed.
So let's talk about what Apple do remarkably well -- CPUs.Its impressive to see them progress, especially with there own GPU now but they aren't really doing anything remarkable. Qualcomm and Samsung(who most people are sleep on) are both right there with them.
Theres this simple approach to things on the one hand, and their tendency to oversell minor stuff on the other that makes people overlook how genuinely top of the class they can be. Its not just that dumb overpriced hardware trope.I love how people dismiss iPhones as pathetic toys or fashionable baubles, like "all" Apple products, and then when news like this comes out the mental gymnastics are on full display.
It's almost as if Apple is a highly competent technology company.
Wait wait wait, so the Iphone 8 is roughly twice as fast as my iPad Pro 2015?
Ehh bigger cores will outperform smaller ones, this isn't new. They are still about the same size overall. Single core isn't more important either. IOS' previously shitty multitasking is a testament to this. I wonder if apps still run in that shitty suspend flag they have.
Also, display resolution does matter in alot of Geekbench's tests and Apple hasn't been as far ahead considering.
https://www.geekbench.com/doc/geekb...eekbench.com/doc/geekbench4-cpu-workloads.pdf
Qualcomm and Samsung(who most people are sleep on) are both right there with them.
No I am not shit-posting. We've reached a point where phones pack more power than the average user uses.
This is extremely misleading and mostly not true. The S8 is faster at certain tasks and the 7 is faster at others. And still the resolution thing applies cause the 7, even the 8 are still pretty low resolution.
Multi core is vastly more important as we continue to head to brickwalls in advancement. Die shrinks are less and less effective. The fact that developers continue to push single core to the limit doesn't change this.single core performance is absolutely more important, as the vast majority of end-user computing today is still single threaded. most perceived speed will be on IPS which is where the vast majority of single core performance is derived from.
also the entire point to Apple's "multi-tasking" was "what do users expect" vs. "how has computing traditionally handled it". And it paid off for them (giving users largely what they expect from multi-tasking) Oh and hey, Google ultimately copied a whole ton of it as well (RAM suspend states, dedicated background task threads, etc).
really? where? outside of multi-core benchmarks (which samsung has been uncovered multiple times for gaming), real world performance ALWAYS heavily favors apple. and even real world multi-core performance (where throttling exists), apple outpaces samsung and qualcomm.
A10X is a different class product -- it has a superior LLC setup. A10 to A11 is the fair comparison and the advancement is commendable -- when did Intel last deliver 22% over same-class subsequent gens? But sure, if top-sku is your thing then wait for A11X for X-class comparisons.
Sure Apple are subject to the same diminishing advancements, but they are ahead of Intel in IPC now, and Intel are further ahead on the curve, so I don't see how they would catch up.
So let's talk about what Apple do remarkably well -- CPUs.
Display resolution does not matter in any of the CPU geekbench tests.Ehh bigger cores will outperform smaller ones, this isn't new. They are still about the same size overall. Single core isn't more important either. IOS' previously shitty multitasking is a testament to this. I wonder if apps still run in that shitty suspend flag they have.
Also, display resolution does matter in alot of Geekbench's tests and Apple hasn't been as far ahead considering.
https://www.geekbench.com/doc/geekb...eekbench.com/doc/geekbench4-cpu-workloads.pdf
but this doesn't mean shit unless developers actually extensively thread their apps. The OS has practically no way to help this.Multi core is vastly more important as we continue to head to brickwalls in advancement. Die shrinks are less and less effective. The fact that developers continue to push single core to the limit doesn't change this.
when you are talking games and GPU benchmarks, sure. I've moved on from that. Strictly computing tasks (image editing/manipulation, video editing), or even things like AR (which is compute heavy) have little bearing on resolution. Gaming and pixel throughput are such a minor part of what I'm talking about.. you keep focusing on it because apple is running lower res screens, but even real world computing workflows are significantly faster on iPhones and iPads, where the pixels have virtually no play in it.Secondly, real world performance will always favor Apple, who's flagships run at almost half the resolution of Samsung's. Not to mention the fact that tech wise there is only one SKU to develop to versus dozens of different Andrioids.
I dunno how the Ax's scale though . I will have to see a desktop class CPU from Apple before I put them over intel. Xeon's are amazing.
re: display resolution and geekbench. i just ran geekbench on my MBP both at 1024x768 and 3360x2100. the final score difference was around 5% in multicore which is practically margin of error between tests. the resolution difference between an iphone and a galaxy s8 does not remotely account for the gaps in performance.
Literally everything. They are handheld computers at this point. Well they have been for awhile, but people are using them as that more and more.
Wait those cpu test are doing rendering work?
You would think those benchmark would split the work up?
Display resolution does not matter in any of the CPU geekbench tests.
but this doesn't mean shit unless developers actually extensively thread their apps. The OS has practically no way to help this.
when you are talking games and GPU benchmarks, sure. I've moved on from that. Strictly computing tasks (image editing/manipulation, video editing), or even things like AR (which is compute heavy) have little bearing on resolution. Gaming and pixel throughput are such a minor part of what I'm talking about.. you keep focusing on it because apple is running lower res screens, but even real world computing workflows are significantly faster on iPhones and iPads, where the pixels have virtually no play in it.
but Xeons aren't desktop CPUs.. I don't think anyone is arguing that the AXX series is nowhere near workstation or server performance yet. we are talking about desktops, which the geekbench results show that in a burst performance.. the AXX can keep up with mid range desktop CPUs. We probably won't see them reach workstation levels until/unless apple ever decides that they are then "good enough" for desktop use. I'd have to believe that is their first milestone.
yeah, his focus on the resolution difference is..... odd. iphone beats qualcomm and samsung handily in real world computing tasks (i.e. no graphics), and then with graphics beats them in onscreen performance at a greater rate than is accounted for in the pixel difference. "samsung is pushing x% more pixels", "umm.. ok, but iphone beats samsung by x+n% in framerate/score"