It means Gen11 is making better use of available bandwidth.
That's nice and all. My point was that whereas the platform balancing optimizations are all commendable the architecture improvements appear to be negligible. That the Cores are even worse doesn't make it any better.
That or the previous platform balance was worse implying worse specs than actually possible.Architectural improvements(larger caches, tiling) are why it can perform greater than specs suggest.
Gemini Lake Refresh J5040 gets 95 points in Cinebench R15 1T. That's a 15% improvement. That's a 3-4% higher than specs suggest. It must not having been reaching boost as reliably.
Improvement will be less in MT. Seems to be 5-7%.
Hmm, do we have any idea what kind of average clock it's hitting in ST and MT?
So its actually comparable to ARM cores with similar uarch/performance using 7nm process.
relatively impossible to tech calculated output or the current and "D+1" software connected to it?It is close to impossible to design an x86-64 CPU with the same relative performance in the same power and area range compared to ARM...so i pretty much have doubt in your claim.
Why are you reading Atom threads then?Given AMD and snapdragon progress is there any reason to actually consider atom ?
Given AMD and snapdragon progress is there any reason to actually consider atom ?
This thread started in 2013 before you joined. Times change. It was a question - why are you avoiding the question ?
Err, don't you have all the information to consider whether its suitable for you then?
It's quite simple. For example if you need low power x86 you probably do. If not, an ARM core.
This thread is not single about a single atom generation, hell it is not even about all the things branded "atom" instead it is about intel's small core which has purposes besides being cheaper for intel to produce.My point was technology has changed in 7 years and i was asking if atom was still relevant given new offerings that didn't exist 2013. It was simple enough. I've not tracked amd and snapdragon close enough to know how they compare with regards to cost, power and performance (though i suspect snapdragon beats intel hand downs on performance - esp graphical). I do wonder if there is an x86 emulator that will run on snapdragon - i know for example IBM mostly runs emulator on their risc processors for many of their newer mainframes (crise they must make a killing on those machines).
My point was technology has changed in 7 years and i was asking if atom was still relevant given new offerings that didn't exist 2013.
Emulation by nature has flaws and cannot ever be anything more than a stepping stone. It's not just about loss in performance, there's often significant loss in compatibility that articles do not discuss. Of course, its trying to be something its not.
So ultimately it still depends on you. You could have asked a technical question but you did not.
Is this kind of reply really necessary? His question was a fair question. Chill.Why are you reading Atom threads then?