NVIDIA Tegra 4 Architecture Deep Dive, Plus Tegra 4i, Icera i500 & Phoenix Hands On
by Anand Lal Shimpi & Brian Klug on February 24, 2013 3:00 PM ESTTegra 4 Performance
NVIDIA shared a bit of performance data generated from a 1.9GHz Tegra 4 reference tablet. CPU performance is understandably higher than anything we’ve seen from anything ARM or Atom x86 based thus far:
On the GPU front NVIDIA claims to offer performance competitive with Apple’s iPad 4, which is quite impressive considering how far behind NVIDIA had been over the previous two generations.
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tipoo - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
Under 500 in Sunspider, about twice as fast as anything else ARM. But then again, it's a few months newer than that, and actually still not shipping. And as usual with Nvidia they're early to each party (first to dual core, first to quad core), but not always the best performing. We'll see if other Cortex A15 designs beat it.I'd love to see four of those cores paired with SGXs upcoming 600/Rogue series.
jeffkibuule - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
SunSpider is so software sensitive that a Tegra 3 @ 1.2 Ghz on Windows RT beats a Snapdraon S4 Pro @ 1.5Ghz on Nexus 4 using Chrome. It's a terrible benchmark because its so dependent on underlying kernel optimizations in the Android phone market.tipoo - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
True, other benchmarks are similarly impressive though.karasaj - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
Psh it has nothing on my desktop! 125ms on sunspider... Nvidia so behind.Anyways, still looks impressive. I really want to see some Krait 600/800 benchmarks.
tipoo - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
The fact that they're getting well below an order of magnitude slower than desktops is impressive in itself too. Even with iPad 2 level performance I still was reluctant to do most of my web browsing on a tablet for the performance. Maybe with Tegra 4 and beyond hardware speed that will change.Mumrik - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
As someone with heavily tabbed browsing habits, I don't think I'll ever make that jump (and I own a tablet).tipoo - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
Also true, that's my other thing. I like to open a bunch of background tabs and have them ready as I go through each one. Right now, tablets don't do background loading, as far as I know, and if they did they wouldn't be powerful enough to keep the main tab smooth while doing it.Tarwin - Monday, February 25, 2013 - link
Tablets DO do background loading, as long as they're android. The only performance I've seen is from lack of RAM on my phone and lack of bandwidth on the phone and tablet but those things affect any computer as well. One observation to ne made, they do load in the background but things like audio and video playback will pause if you switch to another tab.von Krupp - Monday, February 25, 2013 - link
Even Windows Phone 7.5 and 8 do background loading. I haven't used it, but I'd wager that RT does as well, if even the gimpy mobile OS can.tuxRoller - Sunday, February 24, 2013 - link
As someone who had, until recently, over 40 tabs open on my chrome browser (Nexus 4), the critical problem has been memory. With enough memory, and good enough task management, these problems tend to go away.Of course, maybe you are than 0.00001% who has hundreds or thousands of tabs open in which case I pity any computer you are likely to own.