Arachnotronic
Lifer
- Mar 10, 2006
- 11,715
- 2,012
- 126
TSMC 20nm brings 15% higher performance at same power or 30% lower power for same performance wrt TSMC 28HPM. btw this comparison is with 28HPM which is the best foundry process and not Samsung 28nm gate first which is inferior in transistor performance.
http://www.eda.org/edps/edp2013/Papers/4-4 FINAL for Tom Quan.pdf
slide 19
16FF/28HPM 16FF/20SoC
Speed @ same total power 38% 20%
Total power saving @ same speed 54% 35%
16FF 20SOC 28HPM
Speed at same Power 1.38x 1.15x 1x
Power at same speed 0.46x 0.71x 1x
So a 1.4 ghz Cyclone will draw 30+% lower power (given Apple is moving from samsung 28nm which has lesser performance than TSMC 28HPM). Also at the same power Apple can clock the A7 at 1.6 Ghz at TSMC 20nm vs TSMC 28HPM and most likely 1.7 Ghz when you compare with Samsung 28nm. This is without any power efficiency improvements to the core and any power management improvement like finer grained power gating etc. Apple also can easily have better turbo speeds if they implement a quality DVFS (Dynamic voltage and frequency scaling) system like the one found on Intel Baytrail/AMD Mullins.
By clocking the 4 cores at 1 Ghz on TSMC 20nm Apple can run at lower voltage and easily run 4 Cyclone cores within the same power as 2 Cyclone cores at 28nm. At 1.4 Ghz itself Apple has cut power by more than 30% by process transition. Add power efficiency improvements and better DVFS and Apple could even do better.
As for the GPU you are talking about PowerVR which is the leader in mobile graphics and power efficiency. Rogue 6XT will be competitive against Kepler K1. Intel graphics against Rogue 6XT is a mismatch which Apple will easily win.
What makes you think Apple will go quad core? If anything, Apple is likely to improve the core (fixing some of the glass jaws, like what cripples A7's 3DMark Physics score) and stick to a dual core solution. After all, if Apple's goal is to eventually replace Intel in the MBA/rMBP, you would expect that they would want to build cores that don't sacrifice on ST performance relative to the Intel parts
Last edited:
