A10X already is the A11X is going to be ridiculous, not gaming laptop crazy but more then enough for photography, video rendering, and even cad and other 3D modeling things.Yeah the graphics processor will probably be laptop level at this point![]()
A10X already is the A11X is going to be ridiculous, not gaming laptop crazy but more then enough for photography, video rendering, and even cad and other 3D modeling things.
I honestly feel like iOS 11 is a tease for iOS 12 when Apple will introduce Final Cut and Xcode for iOSYeah definitely. Maybe Apple can finally put an operating system that actually suits that kinda power on it(iOS 11 is a step in the right direction, but still not a powerhouse OS). Even so, the Pro is a very useful device because of its power.
I honestly feel like iOS 11 is a tease for iOS 12 when Apple will introduce Final Cut and Xcode for iOS
A base model MacBook Pro seems to run Final Cut perfectly, and the current iPad Pro is performing right there with it. I think you may be exaggerating a tiny bit...I believe Final Cut still heavily relies on GPU's, as well as multiple cores, and the iPhone's GPU will never get even close to a dedicated one. You just can't compete with a 150W+ part in such a small package.
* 7nm fabrication
* 3 High Power Cores
* 5 Low Power Cores
* 8 Core 2nd generation Apple GPU
Predicted Geekebench scores
Single Core: 4,500
MultiCore: 12, 000
Compute: 45,000
I doubt that, the A11X would need a big clock speed increase to get 6000 single core speed, honestly I think we are reaching the upper limits of a single core in a proccesor, I mean look at other mobile chips. 4500-4900. Your multicore estimate could come to fruition depending on improved core perf and the ability of 8 core running together. I'm not sure though, I don't see 7nm processor being that insane. I'm keeping the proccesor estimates conservative and banking on an awesome new GPU from Apple's wizards.Present A11 scores
Single Core 4500ish
Multi core 10k
Predicted for A11X
Single core 6000
Multi core 15000
A base model MacBook Pro seems to run Final Cut perfectly, and the current iPad Pro is performing right there with it. I think you may be exaggerating a tiny bit...
Even the 12 inch MacBook can run final cut. Albeit not fantastic 4K exportingA base model MacBook Pro seems to run Final Cut perfectly, and the current iPad Pro is performing right there with it. I think you may be exaggerating a tiny bit...
Your laws of physics ignore the laws of software efficiency and the laws of shared CPU/GPU memory (how Serif get an A10X to outperform a Core-i7).I have a Mac Pro with an upgraded CPU and GPU. I often watch the activity of both the multicore Xeon and GPU, and Strelok is right. Both are taking up a LOT of power and producing a lot of heat to get a lot of work done quickly.
Although my iPad Pro 12.9” is wonderful, (I love it!!), and it does great with 4K video in LumaFusion, and the CPU performs great with Cubasis and Notion iOS, the wattage and massive torque of high core count Xeons and a separate high-performance GPU just can’t be matched by a SoC. It goes against the laws of physics. More power in, more power out.
Yes, a SoC will beat an i5, but not a workstation Xeon any time soon.
A base model MacBook Pro seems to run Final Cut perfectly, and the current iPad Pro is performing right there with it. I think you may be exaggerating a tiny bit...
I’ve never seen issues with iPad Pro throttling it’s chip. I have seen my iPhone do it but not iPad.The performance of the iPad Pro can only compete with entry level MacBooks in short bursts. This is why synthetic benchmarks don't tell the whole story. Video editing requires lots of number crushing over long periods of time. The iPad would soon throttle and slow considerably, but the MacBook will happily crunch away for hours on end.
At a basic level yes, but the memory subsystem is usually also beefed up to handle increased bandwidth from CPU and GPU. They also usually have larger L1/L2 cache.It will be an A11 with added CPU and GPU cores and increased clock speed, wasnt this always the case?
At a basic level yes, but the memory subsystem is usually also beefed up to handle increased bandwidth from CPU and GPU. They also usually have larger L1/L2 cache.
7nm is very likely a given if history repeats itself. 7nm would further allow for a larger battery and less heat. A new gpu from Apple with the thermal headroom of iPad is going to take the iPad to new levels of performance and graphic capability for professionals.So why do you hope for 7nm fabrication and new gpu?
they've only just moved to 10nm fabrication, so I don't see 7 within the next year. It's harder than used to be to get to the next step down and still get sufficient yields after binning. Might be a big improvement in GPU if they're designing it from scratch specifically to be impressive...
Ah yes the transistor density that Intel have been really struggling to get out in volume and have repeatedly pushed back, and indeed are still having teething problems with... of course....
Keep in mind TSMC's 7nm is roughly equivalent to Intel's 10nm, so this is not some groundbreaking technology.
The performance of the iPad Pro can only compete with entry level MacBooks in short bursts. This is why synthetic benchmarks don't tell the whole story. Video editing requires lots of number crushing over long periods of time. The iPad would soon throttle and slow considerably, but the MacBook will happily crunch away for hours on end.