Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
Better get shot of my 3 year old iMac then :(

IzlT4oc.jpg
.....weak

by 2017 standards at least.
 
The articles goes into greater detail. Here’s the short version the A10X only shows up as a 2 Core CPU as being available at any given time Either an app is using 2 High Power Cores or 2 Low Power Cores all 4 Cores can not run at once.
However the A11 Bionic has flexibility and is capable to have all 6 Cores running at the same time or independently as needed. Marking a monumental change.

http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/09/11/iphone-x-a11-six-cores/

Yet another reason I’m glad I didn’t get a 10.5” IPad Pro.

FYI, using the word “destroys” in the title is an instant eye roll and turns your thread into a joke.
 
Technology is constantly evolving, and in some cases, improving. New tech: fast and perhaps better with a pinch of "Ooooh Shiny." thrown in.

Unless they release a Mini with Pencil support, I am good iPad-wise.

I enjoy what I own and leave it at that.
 
The articles goes into greater detail. Here’s the short version the A10X only shows up as a 2 Core CPU as being available at any given time Either an app is using 2 High Power Cores or 2 Low Power Cores all 4 Cores can not run at once.
However the A11 Bionic has flexibility and is capable to have all 6 Cores running at the same time or independently as needed. Marking a monumental change.

http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/09/11/iphone-x-a11-six-cores/

Yet another reason I’m glad I didn’t get a 10.5” IPad Pro.

1. CPU power is pretty much the same. If the A10X is struggling, then the A11 will also struggle with a CPU related task.
2. GPU on the iPad Pro is 2X more powerful than the A11. Why else you think the iPad Pro has pro motion and the iPhone X doesn’t.

So A10X > A11 in terms of power.
 
Why? What are planning on using the iPad for that requires such a fast processor. The A10 is plenty fast and I see no downsides of using the iPad. I think its silly to hold off on a product that works so well, just for the hope and promise a future version will be even faster.

To expand on your point of existing software: Any iOS developer would be a fool to try to market an App that runs too slowly on the fastest iPad in existence. Trust me - however fast a processor is, the way the developer optimizes his software matters a whole lot more for performance. And that same developer would make a lot more money if his app ran well on the slowest iPads still in mass use.

As a developer, I always try to develop on somewhat outdated hardware so I don't fall into the trap of thinking my code is fast enough when it's not. You can always make code fast enough. And anything the CPU is too slow for you can leverage the GPU for. Perhaps a more difficult limitation is size of memory for Pro-code where you have to work with enormous models, e.g. CAD software or pro-rendering software. But even here, you have no choice but to support the iPads people have, so if you can't figure out how to do that, another developer will.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Conutz
I have been waffling back and forth on whether or not I'm going to upgrade my 10.5" Pro. It's really hard to decide for sure without seeing the new one first and hearing the feature list.

That being said, a faster processor would NOT be on the list of reasons I'd upgrade. The A10X in my 10.5" Pro has NEVER made me wish I had a more powerful processor. It is a screamer.
 
That being said, a faster processor would NOT be on the list of reasons I'd upgrade. The A10X in my 10.5" Pro has NEVER made me wish I had a more powerful processor. It is a screamer.
Agree. One of the many things that the 2017 iPad Pro's got right were the processors. The tablets themselves are very responsive without showing any hint of lag. It would be hard to notice a speed improvement from a newer processor when the A10X already chews through anything you throw at it.

But I am curious to see what the 2018 iPad Pro's have to offer. Judging by rumours, it seems that the new iPad Pro's might be the most radical design for iPad's since their inception; as radical and different like the iPhone X was.

Hopefully the price won't be as radical as the X.
 
  • Like
Reactions: spiderman0616
When updating my iPad pro 10.5 and iPhone 8 plus the iPad finishes several minutes before the iPhone 8 plus. Especially during the preparing update phase.
 
The articles goes into greater detail. Here’s the short version the A10X only shows up as a 2 Core CPU as being available at any given time Either an app is using 2 High Power Cores or 2 Low Power Cores all 4 Cores can not run at once.
However the A11 Bionic has flexibility and is capable to have all 6 Cores running at the same time or independently as needed. Marking a monumental change.

http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/09/11/iphone-x-a11-six-cores/

Yet another reason I’m glad I didn’t get a 10.5” IPad Pro.

And since Geekbench 6 just came out, let’s test multi core scores shall we

With Geekbench 5 A10X was on par multi core wise with A11

But with Geekbench 6, not only does the A10X smoke the A11 but thanks to real world usage ( thinking outside the box) A10X in multi core hovers around A12 territory, between the XR/XS ( assuming the makers of Geekbench included RAM as part of real life usage the A10X iPads beat out the XR since that has 3GB of RAM)
 

Attachments

  • 179CDB46-56D1-4850-901E-72385AF772F8.png
    179CDB46-56D1-4850-901E-72385AF772F8.png
    423.5 KB · Views: 64
The articles goes into greater detail. Here’s the short version the A10X only shows up as a 2 Core CPU as being available at any given time Either an app is using 2 High Power Cores or 2 Low Power Cores all 4 Cores can not run at once.
However the A11 Bionic has flexibility and is capable to have all 6 Cores running at the same time or independently as needed. Marking a monumental change.

http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/09/11/iphone-x-a11-six-cores/

Yet another reason I’m glad I didn’t get a 10.5” IPad Pro.

Except there was never an iPad with A11 Bionic and if we're having an Apple SoC history lesson here, A11 Bionic marked the end of 32-bit ARM support (which is largely what caused A6 to be dropped from iOS 11 [and for all 32-bit apps to stop functioning in iOS 11 even on supported Apple SoCs that had 32-bit ARM instruction sets], despite running iOS 10 better than any iPad/iPhone has ever run their final OS). Not saying A11 Bionic sucked. Just that there were trade-offs.

Also, there are many more reasons why you ought to be glad that you didn't get a 10.5-inch iPad Pro. That display frequently had many issues, for instance.

“I’m glad I didn’t get the iPad Pro 10.5 2nd gen because the A12 destroys the A11X”
No such iPad or SoC...? Like, I get that it's sarcasm, but it's not like there weren't real and significant differences between A10/A10X and the Bionic generation of A-series SoCs. And, sure, an iPad with the standard non-X/non-Z A12 seems old these days. But to dismiss it as standard evolution dismisses the fact that A10 to anything after it was substantial. Apple didn't know what they were doing during their first bout with asymmetric cores.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Digitalguy
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.