So if I own a iMac10,1 at 3.06GHz for example, why should I or should I not expect that my benchmark result would be significantly different from that listed in Mactracker, for the same iMac10,1 3.06GHz? Since the list of Apple models is finite (large, but finite) and the specs are consistent between models, I would think there would be little variance in benchmark results for a specific model, once a particular model (for example, a "iMac10,1") is tested and the results posted, whether posted by Mactracker or just other users with the same model. Primate Labs recommend all users update their version of Geekbench, which you can download from the official site now.Mactracker provides CPU benchmarks for the majority of the Mac models, including the variants within the same model line, where the CPU speed differs. Improved multi-core performance: Geekbench 6.1 improves multi-core implementations of the Background Blur and Horizon Detection workloads, especially on high-end desktop processors.Īs a result of all of these changes, Primate Labs say that single-core scores are expected to be raised by up to 5%, and multi-core scores to be raised by up to 10%.Support for fixed-point math: Geekbench 6.1 uses fixed-point math to implement some image processing functions on systems without FP16 instructions.Support for AVX512-FP16 instructions: AVX512-FP16 instructions are supported for several image processing functions.Support for SVE instructions: Geekbench 6.1 brings support for SVE instructions, an extension of the AArch64 ISA.Primate Labs specifically mention that this may help on the Samsung Galaxy S23 series. Increased workload gap: To avoid thermal throttling, the gap between workloads has been increased from two seconds to five seconds.It also improves the optimization switches used when building Geekbench. Clang 16: This new version of Geekbench is built across all platforms with Clang 16.
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