- Mar 11, 2000
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So, a lot of the tech blogs continue to say the Apple A10 will be on 10 nm TSMC. This is wrong from what I gather, correct? My understanding it will remain on TSMC's 16 nm. (No more Samsung.)
Nonetheless I'm curious what type of speed boost there will be going from A9 to A10. It seems Apple has consistently increased performance significantly from generation to generation, but in many cases a lot of that performance increase could be attributed to the smaller process used, although the A4->A5's increase was due to going dual-core at the expense of power utilization.
Apple A4: 45 nm
Apple A5: 45 nm
Apple A5: 32 nm with better battery life than A5 45 nm
Apple A6: 32 nm
Apple A7: 28 nm
Apple A8: 20 nm
Apple A9: 16 nm TSMC or 14 nm Samsung
Apple A10: 16 nm TSMC?
For comparative benchmarketing scores, check out this stock blog (not mine):
http://www.fool.com/investing/gener...-the-performance-of-the-apple-inc-a10-ch.aspx
Are you guys expecting a big boost in speed from A10 over A9, or will the fact it's on the same process as A9 be a big handicap? In the early days, Apple's designs improved by leaps and bounds, but A9 is comparatively much more mature, so one wonders why whiz-bang design and performance improvements PA Semi/Apple can come up with this time without the help of a process shrink.
I will likely buy an iPhone 7 next month with A10. Ironically though, CPU performance isn't my main concern. I'm currently on an iPhone 5S which has too little memory, and my aging eyes are having trouble with the small fonts these days. I really want to wait for Apple 11 and the iPhone 2017 with a new form factor, but the iPhone 7 will have to do. Hopefully the iPhone 7 Plus/Pro will come with 3-4 GB RAM.
EDIT Sept. 7:
Apple A10 Fusion: big.LITTLE Quad-core
Here are AnandTech pix from the live blog of the launch:
Nonetheless I'm curious what type of speed boost there will be going from A9 to A10. It seems Apple has consistently increased performance significantly from generation to generation, but in many cases a lot of that performance increase could be attributed to the smaller process used, although the A4->A5's increase was due to going dual-core at the expense of power utilization.
Apple A4: 45 nm
Apple A5: 45 nm
Apple A5: 32 nm with better battery life than A5 45 nm
Apple A6: 32 nm
Apple A7: 28 nm
Apple A8: 20 nm
Apple A9: 16 nm TSMC or 14 nm Samsung
Apple A10: 16 nm TSMC?
For comparative benchmarketing scores, check out this stock blog (not mine):
http://www.fool.com/investing/gener...-the-performance-of-the-apple-inc-a10-ch.aspx
Are you guys expecting a big boost in speed from A10 over A9, or will the fact it's on the same process as A9 be a big handicap? In the early days, Apple's designs improved by leaps and bounds, but A9 is comparatively much more mature, so one wonders why whiz-bang design and performance improvements PA Semi/Apple can come up with this time without the help of a process shrink.
I will likely buy an iPhone 7 next month with A10. Ironically though, CPU performance isn't my main concern. I'm currently on an iPhone 5S which has too little memory, and my aging eyes are having trouble with the small fonts these days. I really want to wait for Apple 11 and the iPhone 2017 with a new form factor, but the iPhone 7 will have to do. Hopefully the iPhone 7 Plus/Pro will come with 3-4 GB RAM.
EDIT Sept. 7:
Apple A10 Fusion: big.LITTLE Quad-core
Here are AnandTech pix from the live blog of the launch:






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