Not exact matches
ICS, streamlined version of sense versus sense 3.0, fastest
processor benchmarked yet for an android phone, better screen resolution than the Samsung Galaxy SII on an Super AMOLED screen —
How is this not a
high end phone?
ARM
processors are not designed for
high power tasks (
high end gaming), so stacking enough of them on the board is not only very expensive (
processor costs are tied to
how many you can make at once, so making a 4 core
processor is way cheaper than making 4 singles), and they'd have to stack 2 or 3 of them on the board, which also introduces design headaches and scalability (reducing the cost of making the machine in the future) issues.
While we already knew the iMac Pro will be the fastest Mac ever, at least until Apple releases its promised modular Mac Pro at some point in the future, now we have an idea of just
how fast the desktop workhorse will truly be.YouTube reviewers Marques Brownlee and Jonathan Morrison have each shared hands - on videos of the iMac Pro, and put its CPU performance to the test with benchmarks on Geekbench, which simulates real - world workload scenarios.In both videos, the mid-range iMac Pro with a 10 - core 3.0 GHz Intel Xeon
processor recorded a multi-core score of just over 37,400, which is up to 45 percent faster than the
high -
end 2013 Mac Pro's average multi-core score of 25,747.
Presumably things would be even quicker if you opted for a
higher -
end model that had a Core i3 or Core i5
processor inside, but considering
how quick the Chromebook 13 was with the Celeron I'm not sure you can justify those models without a specific need.
In many apps you won't necessarily feel the difference, as we've reached the point where software optimization means more to
how a
high -
end phone «feels» than
processor performance.