Perhaps it is talking about PowerVR G6200, the performance of which (in GFLOPs) is about SGX554MP4 or SGX544MP4...Looks like this will come with 554MP4 or 544MP4
Perhaps it is talking about PowerVR G6200, the performance of which (in GFLOPs) is about SGX554MP4 or SGX544MP4...Looks like this will come with 554MP4 or 544MP4
MediaTek already demonstrated the MT8135 scoring quite a bit higher -- 46 fps versus 35 -- in the Egypt HD benchmark.
http://youtu.be/Kf_ZGDoEPMo
Unless this latest run of the test only picked up on the speed of the LITTLE CPU cores, it's potentially underclocked here as the reported top frequency is 1.2 GHz.
Everyone was wondering where in hell was ARM going to put that GPU, here it is.
So it's either a much lower clocked Mali 450MP8 (~300MHz?) or a similarly clocked Mali 450MP4 with the increased performance coming from that much needed second vertex shader.
And FWIW, the reported max clocks for the production MT6592 are those same 2GHz you're asking for.
I think they're aiming for the Snapdragon 800's 30k Antutu scores, and then build all the marketing around that.
10GHz!Ah, take me back to the days of Netburst...
This makes a lot of sense to me, and yet we already know it will never happen. Bleargh.mariner said:A pity we won't be seeing a dual A15 + dual A7 in phones any time soon as this might prove very capable in mid-range devices.
Qualcomm's nightmare has finally come true. Earlier today, MediaTek officially introduced the world's first true octa-core mobile processor, MT6592, and the first devices to feature it are expected to arrive as soon as end of year. This 28nm chip packs eight low-power Cortex-A7 cores, and courtesy of the Heterogeneous Multi-Processing use model on top of ARM's big.LITTLE architecture, all eight cores can operate simultaneously -- at up to between 1.7GHz and 2GHz, depending on the bin.
MediaTek pointed that Chrome can already make use of all eight cores, and likewise with some map apps, video players plus multi-window function. According to the company's figures, the MT6592 manages to beat what appears to be the quad-core Snapdragon 800 in benchmarks, power consumption (as low as 40 percent) and temperature.
I don't see why all the hate for these 8 cores, there's plenty of usages for them.