Today's Apple event

Jimmyjames

Site Champ
Posts
676
Reaction score
763
Is It possible M3 will have similar single thread performance to A17? A17 cores are apparently already using M1/M2 core power (around 5W).
I thought my estimate of 3300 points GB6 was low, but 15% over M2 wouldn’t get there 😬
I don’t think 15% over the M2 gets to 3000. So yes, it’ll probably score around the A17.
 

Andropov

Site Champ
Posts
620
Reaction score
780
Location
Spain
The GPU seems to be able to use much more power than the M1. I wonder if that could’ve lead them to clock the CPU cores more conservatively so the whole SoC package power doesn’t increase as much.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_5193.jpeg
    IMG_5193.jpeg
    37.7 KB · Views: 26

Jimmyjames

Site Champ
Posts
676
Reaction score
763
I’m not enamoured by this “compared to the last Intel MacBook Pro”, or even “compared to the M1 MacBook Pro”.
 

Yoused

up
Posts
5,627
Reaction score
8,947
Location
knee deep in the road apples of the 4 horsemen
I really do not think that is correct, the M1/M2 Pro were always their own die, not cut-down M1/M2 Max dies; and that would be a horrendous waste of wafer space...?

Here are M1 dies

apple-m1-family-dies.png

You can clearly see that Max looks exactly like Pro but with doubled GPU cores. As Andropov says, not literally "cut off", but using the same layout (less engineering work). M2 used the same technique.
 

leman

Site Champ
Posts
641
Reaction score
1,196
I really do not think that is correct, the M1/M2 Pro were always their own die, not cut-down M1/M2 Max dies; and that would be a horrendous waste of wafer space...?

They were cut down dies, just not physically. They had one chip layout (Max) and only manufactured one part of it (Pro). Now they have two layouts, with three physical dies. Interesting.
 

leman

Site Champ
Posts
641
Reaction score
1,196
Is It possible M3 will have similar single thread performance to A17? A17 cores are apparently already using M1/M2 core power (around 5W).
I thought my estimate of 3300 points GB6 was low, but 15% over M2 wouldn’t get there 😬

Almost seems like it, right?
 

Aaronage

Power User
Posts
144
Reaction score
213
I can’t help feeling like this falls short on the CPU front.
Are they facing some challenges? I mean, aside from slowing core performance increases, it’s odd that they still haven’t gotten to armv9 and SVE yet.
 

Jimmyjames

Site Champ
Posts
676
Reaction score
763
Just looking at the iPhone page, they claim 10% improvement, and that was pretty good in reality, so maybe 15% will be ok?
 

Jimmyjames

Site Champ
Posts
676
Reaction score
763
I can’t help feeling like this falls short on the CPU front.
Are they facing some challenges? I mean, aside from slowing core performance increases, it’s odd that they still haven’t gotten to armv9 and SVE yet.
Yeah, I’m really trying to resist the urge to doom, and it’s certainly worth waiting to see actual benchmarks, but it does feel underwhelming to me.
 

Yoused

up
Posts
5,627
Reaction score
8,947
Location
knee deep in the road apples of the 4 horsemen
The E cores got so many great upgrades over the years that now they must be quite a big portion of the multi core performance. Really interesting that the M3 Pro is 6+6. I wonder if a 3-tier CPU is in the near future.
No, I think not. Looking at the die shots, with my untrained eye, the E-cores appear to be nearly half the size of the P-cores, when they were closer to a quarter on older designs. This might be partly a quirk of the N3 process, which does not down-scale SRAM very much, but I believe Apple is putting more juice into the E-cores so that they can make good use of them without having to resort to putting in mid-cores.
 
Top Bottom
1 2