iPhone 6 is out today. Has anyone bought one yet?
Could you do the on-screen test, eg. T-Rex?GFX BENCH:
Manhattan 1862 (30fps)
1080p offscreen manahttan 1105 (17.8fps)
TRex: 2885 (51.5 fps)
1080p offscreen TREX: 2388 42.7fps
Low Level Tests:
ALU 1801 60fps
1080p ALU Offscreen 5152 (85.9 fps)
Alpha Blending 7655 mb/s
1080p Alpha Blending Offscreen 8334 mb/s
Driver Overhead 1753 (58.4fps)
Diver Overhead Offscreen 5808 (96.8 fps)
Fill 3471 mtexels/s
1080p OIffscreen Fill 3421 mtexel/s
Mine was delivered today. 6 Plus.
Could you do the on-screen test, eg. T-Rex?
We all know the off-screen tests will be faster for A8 vs A7, but that may not be case for on-screen. It seems A8 is still faster with the iPhone 6 though.
http://gfxbench.com/device.jsp?D=Apple+iPhone+6&testgroup=null&benchmark=null
However, I wonder if A8 is still faster with the iPhone 6 plus.
We need benches! See above.
if you have 2 iPhones with the same price, 1 with a 4X faster SoC as only difference, which one would you choose?
Which exactly proves my point that advancing technology is always better than asking a company to stop innovating
His question was perfectly reasonable.
Just Ran Trex again onscreen
2882, 51.5 fps
But you might, rightly so, say that those phones won't have the same price or availability. That is true; the iPhone 6 will drop in price when your hypothetical iPhone 6s drops in the market.
Ooo post benches
Seems like another (maybe unintentional) straw man. So to make sure there is no confusion, let's take your original claim:4x faster at the same price isn't an option for any phone manufacturer, so that's a pretty ridiculous hypothetical.
You could get more than a 4x speed increase by putting a Xeon E5 in the next iPhone. Is building an iPhone with a Xeon a good idea or a bad idea? Why or why not?
Or maybe you could build a 10-core A8 at 5Ghz and blow all the other phones away. Is that viable?
In what way has Apple stopped innovating? The iPhone 6 is faster with greatly improved battery life and they've apparently eliminated CPU throttling.
That's improvement on three different vectors, speed being only one of them. Explain how that is bad.
So in your hypothetical scenario, it is possible and it would launch at the same price as the iPhone 6.Lets say the Apple A9 suddenly has 4x CPU and GPU performance increase, what applications would benefit from this? It appears to me that nearly everything runs optimally already, and them majority of the apps don't even try to take full advantage of the current iPhone 5S SoC, with the exception of games like Infinity Blade... Thoughts?
I have A7 at 42 FPS for trex onscreen. A8 is pulling 10fps more at slightly higher res. Impressive but we will see about the plus.
~30% is nothing compared to 2X Intel, Qualcomm and Nvidia are claiming.
So in your hypothetical scenario
We've seen benchmarks from K1, which are highly impressive. We've also know that Airmont will not get 50% more shaders from the same architecture like Apple, but have 4X as many EUs on a hugely improved architecture on a hugely improved node, so the 2X claim is more than justified. We also know that Qualcomm's 420 is 40% or so faster than 330, and 430 should be healthy improvement as well."Claiming" would be the key word there.
That doesn't change the fact that the A8's GPU performance is unimpressive compared to other mobile SoCs.Intel and nvidia have a laughable presence in mobile phones. I wonder why you mention them?
Should apple watch out for AMD too?
~30% is nothing compared to 2X Intel, Qualcomm and Nvidia are claiming.
That doesn't change the fact that the A8's GPU performance is unimpressive compared to other mobile SoCs.
Fair enough, my apologies for my mistake.I never said that, homie. You quoted the wrong person.
Looking at the GFXbench website, I don't see any phone that beats a score of 2300, so someone needs to put up or shut up.