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iPhone XS, XS Max Are World's Fastest Phones (Again) (tomsguide.com)

According to "several real-world tests and synthetic benchmarks," the new iPhone XS and XS Max, equipped with the world's first 7-nanometer A12 Bionic processor, are the world's fastest smartphones, reports Tom's Guide. They even significantly outperform Qualcomm's Snapdragon 845 chip. From the report: Geekbench 4 is a benchmark that measures overall performance, and no other phone comes close to Apple's new handsets on this test. The iPhone Xs notched 11,420, and the iPhone Xs Max hit 11,515. The older iPhone X scored 10,357, so that's about an 11 percent improvement. There's a lot more distance between the new iPhones and Android flagships. The fastest Android phone around, the OnePlus 6, scored 9,088 on Geekbench 4 with its 8GB of RAM, while the Galaxy Note 9 reached 8,876.

To test real-world performance, we use the Adobe Premiere Clips app to transcode a 2-minute 4K video to 1080p. The iPhone X was miles ahead last year with a time of just 42 seconds. This time around, the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max knocked it down further to 39 seconds. The Galaxy S9+ took 2 minutes and 32 seconds to complete the task, and that's the fastest we've seen from an Android phone. The OnePlus 6 finished in 3:45, and the LG G7 ThinQ took 3:16. One good way to measure real-world performance is to see how long it takes for a phone to load demanding apps. Because the phones have the same processor for this round, we just used the iPhone Xs Max and put it up against the iPhone X and the Galaxy Note 9. The iPhone XS Max was faster every time, including a 15-second victory in Fortnite over the Note 9 and 3-second win in Asphalt 9. The phones were closer in Pokemon Go but the iPhone XS Max still came out on top.
The new iPhones did lag behind the competition in the 3DMark Slingshot Extreme test, which measures graphics performance by evaluating everything from rendering to volumetric lighting. The iPhone XS Max and iPhone X received scores of 4,244 and 4,339, respectively, while the OnePlus 6 received a score of 5,124.

As for the GFXBench 5 test, the iPhone XS Max achieved 1,604.7 frames on the Aztec Ruins portion of the test, and 1,744.44 frames in the Car Chase test," reports Tom's Guide. "The Note 9 was far behind at 851.7 and 1,103 frames, respectively. However, the Galaxy S9+ edged past the iPhone XS Max on this test."

7 of 130 comments (clear)

  1. Notched by mentil · · Score: 4, Funny

    The iPhone Xs notched 11,420

    I see what you did there.

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
  2. WooooHooo? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    As a confirmed iPhone user, am I supposed to actually give a damn about what smartphone is fastest?

    Brings to mind Frank DeFord's book, "The World's tallest Midget".

    It's a friggin Phone for crissakes.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  3. The catch with all previous Apple processors by Utopia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    has been is that they are thermally constrained and achieve these remarkable results when its starts cold. As soon it heats up the processors starts throttling and doesn't do well compared to Qualcomm, Exynos etc.
    This is why it does well on Geekbench benchmarks but not so well in some of the other benchmarks.

    1. Re:The catch with all previous Apple processors by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, it seems like thermal throttling is a real thing https://imgur.com/OThPVWb pretty much across the board. Probably because without they would never achieve warranty as the devices would basically cook themselves to death.

      Need new power test, how long do the devices run at full output before slowing done and then beyond that dying, simply overheating to death or shutdown (probably shutdown, again to preserve warranty but wait why should warranty be protected if the device is shutting down and not working or even when powering down, when they are selling maximum cpu output).

      These test also should be conducted a higher room temperatures, something like 30 degrees C.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  4. Re:geekbench by omnichad · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think someone needs to transcode your comment. It doesn't appear to be in a parseable format.

  5. Re:Doesn't have to be the fastest. by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 2

    A matter of opinion here, but I've always liked Android's stock UI better. Besides, if you want something different, you can just install a launcher. This sort of flexibility is a big plus for Android.

    ...I hope that it makes up for the 700,000 Malware-filled Apps that Google found on the Play Store...

  6. Re:geekbench by e432776 · · Score: 2

    I'd agree with this advice except for one thing: no OS updates for iPhone 4 in some years. I don't know how likely a security issue is in the real world, but certainly interoperability will be compromised with old OS/apps..