If we accept that Apple’s existing/old 12% lead was legitimate (which no one seemed to question), the added 15% lead surely seems just as likely to be real? That speaks to the fact that Samsung’s phone was already behind when it comes to the old testing standard. This jump is almost in line with the iPhone’s Geekbench 5 lead, which was about 12%. More importantly, though, Geekbench 6 seems to focus on taking better advantage of the GPUs across different platforms (Android, iPhone), while the multi-core CPU score should better reflect how newer chips make use of both high-speed and efficiency cores/horsepower to complete different tasks…Īlthough a difference of 28% now makes the iPhone 14 Pro seem much faster on paper, the difference in performance gains between the 14 Pro and S23 Ultra is “just'' 15% (as shown above). Larger maps, larger PDFs files, new HTML workloads, navigation, ray tracing (the gamers know), etc.Photos with a higher megapixel count (new phones feature 48, 50, 64, 108, and even 200MP cameras, which weren’t the norm in 2019 when Geekbench 5 launched).Background blur (like the one you can add on your video calls in apps like Zoom, Slack, iMessage).Applying filters to your photos (we’ve all done it).AI object detection (when your iPhone/Android recognizes your face in photos, or knows to tell food from a dog).No questions asked.Įxcept, many people took it on Twitter to do exactly that - question the reliability of the new Geekbench 6, coming to the conclusion that “Tim Cook bought Geekbench to make the Galaxy S23 Ultra seem slower than it is”.įor starters, the new Geekbench 6 CPU benchmark measures performance in new application areas including Augmented Reality and Machine Learning - you know, the cutting edge tech that’s supposed to change the way we use our phones and live our lives.Īpart from Machine Learning and AI, Geekbench 6 is now supposed to more accurately and extensively test: And what the new tests say is that the iPhone 14 Pro is much faster than any other Android phone on the market, including the Galaxy S23 Ultra and its new “For Galaxy” Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 SoC. Now that the same company (Geekbench) has launched the next version of the 2019 Geekbench 5, called (you guessed it) Geekbench 6, the tests have changed. In other words, Geekbench “can tell you how powerful a phone is”, and respectively when one phone is faster than another, and by how much. It also tests your phone’s gaming abilities, image processing, and video editing power. As per the company’s website, the new Geekbench (the most popular phone benchmark) measures your processor's power for “everything from checking your email to taking a picture to playing music, or all of it at once”.
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