- Jul 27, 2002
- 13,310
- 687
- 126
Edit (2/11/2015): I changed the thread title because the article is worthy of praise just for the sheer amount of time and effort involved - by my guess, but I do not think it is an exaggeration. It is a fascinating technical account on a fascinating chip. I still haven't finished reading it but am trying to. I hope more people read it so that we can have actual discussions on tech, instead of armchair-CEO'ing.
--------
No one should miss that useless benchmark, and I thank AnandTech for living up to expectation, albeit late. Here are key passages from just-published Exynos 5433 article.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8718/the-samsung-galaxy-note-4-exynos-review
The article is incredibly in-depth and at times its writing is confusing, but without a doubt it is the best explanation on big.LITTLE we've got today. Highly recommended read.
--------
No one should miss that useless benchmark, and I thank AnandTech for living up to expectation, albeit late. Here are key passages from just-published Exynos 5433 article.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8718/the-samsung-galaxy-note-4-exynos-review
AnandTech said:Before discussing the results I'd like to mention that I saw a huge discrepancy between Chrome and the stock browser. In Chrome, which I checked was indeed running the exactly same build version for both the Note 4 and the Alpha, I could see the Alpha consistently outperforming the Note 4 in all the tests. Due to this I deemed Chrome to be extremely unreliable as an apples-to-apples comparison of efficiency and reverted to the stock browser. Here I could see proper performance scaling that we would actually expect from the new core architectures and the clock advantage. (pg.6)
AnandTech said:The scores on the Exynos version of the Note 4 are outstanding, beating out all existing devices in our more complex benchmarks. SunSpider is the exception, but seeing the vast discrepancy between browsers and even the Snapdragon version matching Apple's new A8 has made us come to the conclusion that this benchmark has run it's time as a valid test case, and thus we're dropping it from our 2015 test suite going forward. (pg.8, emphasis mine)
The article is incredibly in-depth and at times its writing is confusing, but without a doubt it is the best explanation on big.LITTLE we've got today. Highly recommended read.
Last edited: