These early Geekbench performance numbers for the M1 Max seem a bit soft.
Apple's M1 Max SoC Allegedly Makes Shaky Geekbench Debut : Read more
Apple's M1 Max SoC Allegedly Makes Shaky Geekbench Debut : Read more
Apps running on M1 chips can use both the efficiency cores and the performance cores at the same time. So do Geekbench.either that or M1 chip does not properly scale.
I vaguely remember hearing that e-cores are about 70% as powerful as a p-core... but when you run all p-cores, they won't run the same performance as a single p-core, and the average of 4 p-cores is not going to be the same as the average of 8 p-cores.Alright guys, I did the math.
Be A a performance core and B an efficiency core.
If the second statement is true :
- We know from the M1 benches that 4A + 4B = 7590
- The allegedly M1 Max benches says that 8A + 2B = 11542
2 x (8A + 2B) = 23084
12B = 23064 - 7590 = 15894
B = 1291
A = 606
Which means that a performance core is a little more than twice as powerful as the efficiency one.
It seems consistent with Apple's description of the M1