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Quote from: Lamborghini_diablo on September 17, 2012, 09:05:59 AMQuote from: Master KChief on September 17, 2012, 03:29:31 AMBenchmark results are in...iPhone 5's A6 dual-core processor puts it ahead of the Samsung Galaxy S3 quad-core, and all Android-based devices for that matter. Come at me bro.http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench2/1038647Orly?Orly. That is clearly an S3 running Android 4.1, which isn't available for the S3. Nice try, dude. -_-
Quote from: Master KChief on September 17, 2012, 03:29:31 AMBenchmark results are in...iPhone 5's A6 dual-core processor puts it ahead of the Samsung Galaxy S3 quad-core, and all Android-based devices for that matter. Come at me bro.http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench2/1038647Orly?
Benchmark results are in...iPhone 5's A6 dual-core processor puts it ahead of the Samsung Galaxy S3 quad-core, and all Android-based devices for that matter. Come at me bro.
'leak'
'It’s hard to say if this is the final build that will be released officially, or if this build is unfinished...'
'As always we caution you to proceed with care and make sure you know what you’re doing, lest you end up with a bricked handset and money down the drain.'
This means people have it installed on their phones early.
Simply means it is not officially released, and the version of 4.1 people have access to may not be finished.
Simply a good precaution whenever dealing with early software leaks.
Does the fact that it released early mean it isn't 4.1?
However, i'll play your game:http://browser.primatelabs.com/geekbench2/1043068pre-4.1, and still a higher score. Come at me bro.
Geekbench individual scores are averaged to produce an actual device score. It's common knowledge the current Samsung Galaxy S III has a benchmark of 1560. Let's not try to delude ourselves with isolated incidents.
Same architecture = same calculations per cycle.
Quote from: lp670sv on September 19, 2012, 10:27:39 AMSame architecture = same calculations per cycle.Clearly not the same architecture, custom core.
not to mention by taking all of those Galaxy results that are higher than the iphone 5's and actually acknowledging them instead of taking only the lowest score to compare to the iPhone 5's processor.