“Intel is working on a new SoC (system on a chip) that will compete with the ARM-based designs that have dominated the mobile market for several years. Through a partnership with fabless chip designer SiFive (RISC-V), Intel is licensing IP to create its own 64-bit SoC that’s built on its 7nm node.
Last week, Intel announced a partnership with SiFive for its upcoming Horse Creek platform. Intel is using SiFive’s P550 core for the Horse Creek design, which is SiFive’s “highest performance processor” available. Intel said it will be incorporating its own IP, including DDR and PCIe, into the design.” (src: digitaltrends.com)
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by buying from Amazon Affiliated links: Get the amazing Samsung S21 Ultra 5G with 10x times optical zoom 😀 https://amzn.to/45D8aV2 thanks for keeping this site up and running!
what IS pretty impressive: S21 Ultra 4k Youtube playback (in Firefox App)
x264 x265 browser video playback test
if the browser can play back (x264), this video should work:
if the browser can play back (x265), this video should work:
(almost) dropping no frames (the stutter is because, internet was too slow)
Geekbench says “Excluded Devices:”
“The devices listed below are excluded from the benchmark chart.”
“These devices run Geekbench (and possibly other benchmarks) in an artificial benchmark mode.”
“Other applications do not run in this benchmark mode, which leads to benchmark results that do not correspond to real-world performance.” (src: https://browser.geekbench.com)
So in short: Samsung is cheating. Holy crap. so those results might be not even mean something… so won’t post this propaganda X-D
(it is a fast device… it can edit 40MByte pictures (cropping etc.) very fast, can record & playback 8k Video (even when it is says “don’t do that for long, overheat!”))
the curent (2022-07) top 20 from geekbench.com: (single core)
Device | Score | |
---|---|---|
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1186 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1115 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1107 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1107 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1104 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1094 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1087 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1087 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1083 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1077 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1067 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1058 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
1014 | |
Google Tensor @ 1.8 GHz
|
998 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 870 @ 1.8 GHz
|
989 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
986 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
985 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 870 @ 1.8 GHz
|
981 | |
HiSilicon Kirin 9000 @ 2.0 GHz
|
977 | |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 @ 1.8 GHz
|
974 |
the curent (2022-07) top 20 from NanoReview.net are:
#
|
Processor | Rating | AnTuTu 9 | Geekbench 5* | Cores | Clock** | GPU |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Apple |
98
A+ |
792899
|
1735 / 4803
|
6
(2+4) |
3240 MHz |
Apple GPU
|
|
MediaTek “Mediatek says phones with the Dimensity 9000 Plus are set to launch in Q3 2022. Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi all launched Dimensity 9000 phones earlier this year, but only the Vivo device (the Vivo X80) was available outside China.” (src) |
97
A+ |
1097287
|
1333 / 4321
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3200 MHz |
Mali-G710 MC10
|
|
Qualcomm |
97
A+ |
1090232
|
1304 / 4148
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3200 MHz |
Adreno 730
|
|
MediaTek |
96
A+ |
1013498
|
1264 / 4268
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3050 MHz |
Mali-G710
|
|
Qualcomm |
94
A+ |
1033421
|
1202 / 3757
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3000 MHz |
Adreno 730
|
|
Apple |
92
A+ |
718691
|
1582 / 4111
|
6
(2+4) |
3100 MHz |
Apple GPU
|
|
Qualcomm |
91
A+ |
833579
|
1164 / 3609
|
8
(1+3+4) |
2995 MHz |
Adreno 660
|
|
Samsung |
90
A+ |
940664
|
1144 / 3542
|
8
(1+3+4) |
2800 MHz |
Samsung Xclipse 920
|
|
Qualcomm |
90
A+ |
797629
|
1121 / 3689
|
8
(1+3+4) |
2840 MHz |
Adreno 660
|
|
MediaTek |
87
A+ |
776793
|
918 / 3793
|
8
(4+4) |
2850 MHz |
Mali-G610 MC6
|
|
|
85
A+ |
721566
|
1043 / 2826
|
8
(2+2+4) |
2800 MHz |
Mali-G78 MP20
|
|
HiSilicon |
85
A+ |
756394
|
1044 / 3691
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3130 MHz |
Mali-G78 MP24
|
|
Samsung |
82
A |
744778
|
1081 / 3577
|
8
(1+3+4) |
2900 MHz |
Mali-G78 MP14
|
|
Apple |
82
A |
612995
|
1318 / 3494
|
6
(2+4) |
2660 MHz |
Apple A13 Bionic GPU
|
|
Qualcomm |
78
A |
692270
|
995 / 3370
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3200 MHz |
Adreno 650
|
|
Qualcomm |
78
A |
719304
|
913 / 3278
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3100 MHz |
Adreno 650
|
|
MediaTek |
77
A |
673207
|
968 / 3312
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3000 MHz |
Mali-G77 MC9
|
|
HiSilicon |
77
A |
725229
|
1061 / 3755
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3130 MHz |
Mali-G78 MP22
|
|
Samsung |
77
A |
697954
|
833 / 2896
|
8
(1+3+4) |
2800 MHz |
Mali-G78 MP10
|
|
MediaTek |
76
A |
660418
|
940 / 3182
|
8
(1+3+4) |
3000 MHz |
Mali-G77 MC9
|
how to backup an Android App to file / How to send Android Apps over Bluetooth (or E-Mail)
- bluetooth find and pair user’s phone with phone of user’s friend
- install AppExtract
- it lists all installed apps
- search for the app that needs to be bluetooth transfered
- click on the share button -> bluetooth -> user’s friend’s device
- it will extract-backup the App into a AppName.apk
- that is located on the device under: “ExtractedApks”
possibel pitfalls:
- if the LinageOS flashed target device does not have Google Play Apps / Open GApps installed, those Apps (not all) that require that library won’t start
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