An AMD Ryzen 7 5700G desktop APU has been spotted being tested on a Linux (Ubuntu) system on Geekbench 5. The Ryzen 7 5700G utilized an MSI MAG B550M Mortar motherboard and reached a boost clock of 4.66 GHz. However, the engineering sample's results weren't particularly greater than those of the Renoir Ryzen 7 4700G.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Ryzen-7-5700G-boosting-to-4-6-GHz-offers-unspectacular-results-on-Geekbench-compared-to-Ryzen-7-4700G-but-it-s-early-days-for-the-AMD-desktop-APU.514334.0.html
Good job comparing a windows benchmark to a linux one. 👍🏼👍🏼
Highest score I could find of the 4700G running on Linux was not even 7k.
May I suggest you update the article with this information?
Not too surprising. The power limits are likely to mean there's not much progress in multi-core. Conversely, increased responsiveness from single-core performance is key for mobile and all-in-one systems designed for interactive use.
That said I think I'll still be waiting for a system with built-in AV1 decode - especially important for mobile power use, heat and leaving CPU cores free.
Quote from: DiMart on January 12, 2021, 14:17:40
Good job comparing a windows benchmark to a linux one. 👍🏼👍🏼
Highest score I could find of the 4700G running on Linux was not even 7k.
May I suggest you update the article with this information?
hahaha, that's sooooo true!