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Saturday, October 3, 2015

Apple iPhone 6s review Part 06

Apple A9 chip performance

The new generation of iPhones is powered by a brand new Apple A9 chipset, which packs a dual-core 1.85 GHz Typhoon processor, PowerVR GT7600 six-core graphics and 2GB RAM. The chips are made either by Samsung on 14nm process, or TSMC on 16nm process. All of these mean the A9 has more processing power, a stronger GPU punch, double the RAM and better thermal properties.
Apple iPhone 6s
Apple has always focused on the single-core performance since it is the most important one when it comes to interacting with the iOS user interface and early tests showed that the 64-bit Typhoon core is the best and fastest CPU core currently on the market. On the other hand you are only getting two of those, so we'll see how it goes. In come the benchmarks.
The multi-core score of GeekBench 3 shows how powerful the new dual-core Typhoon processor is. It beats the Snapdragon 810 chips with their quad-Cortex-A57 CPU, but trails behind the Exynos 7420, which uses a similar architecture but a higher clock speed.
Both iPhone 6s and iPhone 6 used for the tests below are running on iOS 9.0.1.

GeekBench 3

Higher is better
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    5215
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    5095
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    4427
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    3796
  • HTC One M9
    3761
  • LG G4
    3509
  • Apple iPhone 6
    2835
  • Meizu m2 note
    2649
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    2552
The single-core results show you the difference. A single Typhoon does insanely better than any other CPU core on the market today. In fact, a single Typhoon core is equal to the 8-core Cortex-A53 performance on the Meizu m2 note.

GeekBench 3 single core

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    2542
  • Apple iPhone 6
    1594
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    1484
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    1351
  • HTC One M9
    1239
The compound BaseMark OS II 2.0 test gauges CPU, GPU, Memory, Web and System performance. In this test there is no one to come even close to the iPhone 6s thanks to Apple's optimized OS. The fact that it has the latest A9 chipset doesn't hurt either.

Basemark OS 2.0

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    2195
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    1750
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    1674
  • LG G4
    1584
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    1440
  • Apple iPhone 6
    1429
  • HTC One M9
    1365
Next - graphics performance. The new iPhone generation utilizes the six-core PowerVR GT7600 GPU, which is quite the beast. The 1080p off-screen benchmarks speak for themselves.

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    79.8
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    59
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    59
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    56
  • HTC One M9
    49
  • LG G4
    34.5
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    28.7
  • Huawei Honor 7
    17

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    39.5
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    26
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    25
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    24
  • HTC One M9
    23
  • LG G4
    14.9
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    12.9
  • Huawei Honor 7
    9.2
The iPhone 6s has a sub-1080p display resolution, which gives it an edge over the 1080p and Quad HD phones in the performance chart.

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    59.6
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    57
  • HTC One M9
    50
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    40.7
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    39
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    38
  • LG G4
    24.7
  • Huawei Honor 7
    19

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    53.6
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    39
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    24.3
  • HTC One M9
    24
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    14
  • LG G4
    9.4
  • Huawei Honor 7
    9.3
Finally, Android has OpenGL ES 3.1 as latest generation graphics, while iOS 9 has Metal. Both allow games to make full use of the built-in GPUs and BaseMark has launched the BaseMark ES3.1 / Metal apps so we can compare the performance cross-platform. Combined with the lower resolution of the iPhone 6s, the Metal test really produces outstanding results.

Basemark ES 3.1 / Metal

Higher is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    879
  • HTC One M9
    409
  • Apple iPhone 6
    370
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    311
Unfortunately,the BrowserMark 2.1 web test wasn't compatible with the new version of Safari and we couldn't perform the benchmark. We were able to test the pure JavaScript performance via the Kraken benchmark though, and it came out class-leading.

Kraken 1.1

Lower is better
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    1737
  • Apple iPhone 6
    2880
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    3989
  • LG G4
    4085
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    4154
  • Apple iPhone 5s (iOS 8)
    5396
  • HTC One M9
    5500
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
    7868
  • Huawei Honor 7
    11493
Apple A9 is a beast - there's no other way to put it. The iPhone 'S' series typically stand for Speed and the iPhone 6s is not only the fastest iPhone to date, it's probably the best performing smartphone too. Apple's choice of designing its own processor pays out every year and makes sure iOS users never have to worry about lackluster performance.
Apple A9 has the power to handle everything you can get on your phone today and is future-proof for the years to come with some huge power reserves under the hood.

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