By: none (none.delete@this.none.com), July 11, 2013 1:49 am
Room: Moderated Discussions
Klimax (danklima.delete@this.gmail.com) on July 11, 2013 12:28 am wrote:
[...]
> Are there any Java/Dalvik benchmarks for Android?
Yes, and some are looking bad for Intel CT+.
For instance for AndEBench Java the K900 (dual Saltwell + HT @ 2.0 GHz) gets 222 while A15 and Krait based Galaxy S4 get close to 600. And if you insist on dual core, Nexus 10 (dual A15) gets 379, while Samsung Galaxy Note (a device more than a year old, dual A9 @ 1.4GHz) gets 213.
http://www.eembc.org/andebench/
Of course that's a single point and no conclusion should be drawn on these results alone.
> Anyway it is trivial to write bad benchmark. (And that's before
> vendors get interested like with ScienceMark or AIDA...)
And that's all that matters in the end: this particular benchmark has now been proven to heavily favor Intel, so it has become useless for comparing micro-architecture performance.
I now wait for evidence that Geekbench favors ARM, and I somehow think nothing as obvious as what was found with AnTuTu will be uncovered.
[...]
> Are there any Java/Dalvik benchmarks for Android?
Yes, and some are looking bad for Intel CT+.
For instance for AndEBench Java the K900 (dual Saltwell + HT @ 2.0 GHz) gets 222 while A15 and Krait based Galaxy S4 get close to 600. And if you insist on dual core, Nexus 10 (dual A15) gets 379, while Samsung Galaxy Note (a device more than a year old, dual A9 @ 1.4GHz) gets 213.
http://www.eembc.org/andebench/
Of course that's a single point and no conclusion should be drawn on these results alone.
> Anyway it is trivial to write bad benchmark. (And that's before
> vendors get interested like with ScienceMark or AIDA...)
And that's all that matters in the end: this particular benchmark has now been proven to heavily favor Intel, so it has become useless for comparing micro-architecture performance.
I now wait for evidence that Geekbench favors ARM, and I somehow think nothing as obvious as what was found with AnTuTu will be uncovered.