Samsung will unveiled the new Galaxy Tab S9 series at the Galaxy Unpacked event in Seoul in the final week of July, which will also feature the next-gen foldables and new smartwatches too. The Ultra model will allegedly have an 11,200mAh battery with 45W fast charging, which is the norm for Samsung. While Samsung is trying to keep its flagship slate under wraps, multiple leaks have exposed its design and specs The S9 Ultra will be the largest of the three new models with a 14.6” AMOLED display (2,960 x 1,848px) and a small notch to house the dual front-facing cameras. Specification: Network Technology GSM / HSPA / LTE / 5G Speed HSPA 42.2/5. ![]() Features 12.4 Super AMOLED display, Snapdragon 865+ chipset, 10090 mAh battery, 512 GB storage, 8 GB RAM. Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 (SM-X910) runs Geekbench 6.1 Overview: Samsung Galaxy Tab S7+ Android tablet. This is also a different variation – SM-X910 instead of the SM-X916B that we saw last time. There should also be 8/128GB and 16/512GB models. Eric Zeman / Android Authority Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 FE review: Pretty, but underpowered Does Samsungs mid-range slate pack enough of a productivity punch to take on the Apple iPad Air By Eric. This particular Tab S9 Ultra was the middle version if the leaked memory info is to be believed – the first benchmark we saw showed 8GB of RAM, this one is up to 12GB (which implies 256GB storage). This is the bespoke Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy chipset that Samsung uses. GeekBench 3 (multi-core) Higher is better. The chipset ran its prime core at 3.36GHz frequency, the four big cores at 2.80GHz and the three little cores at 2.02GHz. We don't have an S820 Galaxy S7 around, so we'll include the scores of the S7 edge, which should perform identically. 6.0) than last time, so the results may not be fully comparable. Although these competitors add more CPUs to improve their multicore-benchmark scores, the extra cores don’t help most applications, which run only on one or two CPUs," Gwennap said.The Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra had another go at Geekbench and achieved slightly higher results – although it also ran a newer version of the benchmark (v6.1 vs. Pierpaolo Figuccia JA couple days back we reported about the Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 Plus getting spotted on the notorious benchmark platform Geekbench. By designing its own CPUs, the company differentiates from its competitors on this metric. "Apple continues to focus on single-core performance. By combining its much better IPC with a similar clock speed, the A10 delivers industry-leading performance.Īpple's focus on single-core performance gives it an upper hand. Samsung’s custom M1 is the fastest at 2.6GHz, but it cannot sustain that speed when three or more cores are running, throttling back to 2.3GHz. Whereas previous Apple generations have lagged in CPU speed, the A10 is now on par with its competitors in this metric. For the comparison, the Mobile Chip report used an average of the Geekbench 3 and Geekbench 4 scores "to iron out some anomalies in the newer test."Īs Gwennap explains, Geekbench focuses on CPU performance "the single-core result is a good measure of a CPU’s performance, whereas the multicore result combines the performance of all CPUs in the system.Apple’s new A10 leads in single-core testing but trails slightly in multicore owing to its lower core count." "Blows" other chips "out of the water": "Owing to.improvements, Hurricane blows other CPUs out of the water," Gwennap wrote. "Apple sells phones, not chips, adding a few dollars of die cost is of little importance if the resulting high performance enables it to sell more $600 products," Gwennap added. FinFETs "are 3D structures that rise above the substrate and resemble a fin, hence the name," as explained here. At 10 x 6.5 x 0.2 inches and 1.1 pounds, the 11-inch Galaxy Tab S7 is thinner and lighter than the Surface Pro 7 (0.3 inches thick, 1.7 pounds), though a hair heavier than the 11-inch iPad Pro. ![]() Money is no obstacle: "Part of Apple’s advantage is its ability to spend money. Die area is expensive for a processor built in leading-edge 16 FinFET technology, and Hurricane uses plenty of it," Gwennap wrote. In fact, the new Hurricane could easily support products such as the MacBook Air that today use lower-speed Intel chips, should Apple choose to port MacOS to ARM. Apple’s CPU prowess is beginning to rival Intel’s. The current MacBook Air ultrathin notebook, which uses a 2.2GHz Core i7-5650U Broadwell processor, scores about the same as the iPhone 7 on single-core Geekbench. Apple’s new CPU actually compares better against Intel’s mainstream x86 cores.
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