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pretzel5297 | 2 years ago
20% increase on performance is compared to M1 not, M2 - which also had 20% increase in performance on M1.
pretzel5297 | 2 years ago
20% increase on performance is compared to M1 not, M2 - which also had 20% increase in performance on M1.
GeekyBear|2 years ago
Nope.
> The M3 chip has single-core and multi-core scores of about 3,000 and 11,700, respectively, in the Geekbench 6 database. When you compare these scores to those of the M2's single-core and multi-core scores (around 2,600 and 9,700, respectively), the M3 chip is indeed up to 20% faster like Apple claims.
https://www.laptopmag.com/laptops/macbooks/apple-m3-benchmar...
> 400 watts is on a desktop chip where there is no concept of battery life.
Yes, and in exchange for that ridiculous 400 watt power draw, Intel saw negligible performance gains.
> In some areas, the extra clock speeds available on the Core i9-14900K show some benefit, but generally speaking, it won't make much difference in most areas.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/21084/intel-core-i9-14900k-co...
Intel only wishes they could hit a 20% gain in exchange for all that increased power draw and heat. As that review noted the best improvement they saw in any of the common benchmarks was just 6%.
slaymaker1907|2 years ago