The Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 SoC has undergone a series of synthetic industry benchmark tests by the same company. Launched earlier this month as the successor to last year’s Snapdragon 865, Qualcomm’s new SoC scored amazing points in benchmark tests involving platforms like AnTuTu and Geekbench. The company typically gives external reviewers hands-on access to Snapdragon’s latest reference designs. However, this year’s coronavirus epidemic has allowed Qualcomm to match results across industry-leading benchmark testing systems.
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 SoC benchmark
Qualcomm has introduced Snapdragon 888 SoC benchmark scores based on CPU, GPU, and AI use cases across platforms such as AnTuTu, Geekbench, GFX Bench, Ludashi AIMark, AITuTu, MLPerf, and Procyon. Check the results below.
As expected, Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 SoC significantly improved scores compared to the initial benchmark scores published by its predecessor Snapdragon 865. On AnTuTu, the new Snapdragon 888 scored an average of 735439, which is well above the Snapdragon 865 score of 541899. Score on the same platform. The predecessor scored 926 and 3,438 points in Geekbench’s single-core and multi-core tests, respectively, while the new Snapdragon 888 scored 1,135 and 3,794 single-core and multi-core points, respectively.
Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 specifications, features
The 5nm chipset is designed to provide faster connection speeds via 5G, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth, and is the third generation Snapdragon X60 that helps provide aggregate support for 5G sub 6GHz carriers. Equipped with a modem. The Snapdragon 888 also supports mmWave technology, which can deliver speeds up to 7.5 Gbps.
The Snapdragon 865 SoC has a Qualcomm Kryo 585 CPU, but the Snapdragon 888 chipset comes with a Kryo 680, which is touted as improving overall CPU performance by 25%. The Snapdragon 888 SoC also comes with an Adreno 660 GPU, which can deliver graphics up to 35% faster than the Snapdragon 865.
The Snapdragon 888 Octa Core is equipped with a 64-bit Kryo 680 single-core based on the ARM Cortex-X1 that is clocked at speeds up to 2.84GHz. There are also three Cortex-A78-based Kryo 680 cores that are clocked up to 2.42 GHz and four Cortex-A55-based Kryo 680 cores that are clocked up to 1.8 GHz.
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