The Intel Core i7-1260P has appeared on Geekbench again delivering a much more promising performance than previously reported efforts. The i7-1260P was part of an unnamed Lenovo laptop system, and there is a belief that Alder Lake mobile parts, such as the i7-1270P, will end up in premium devices such as the Samsung Galaxy Book 2.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Cracking-Intel-Core-i7-1260P-CPU-Geekbench-result-hints-at-stellar-Alder-Lake-performance-levels-for-Samsung-Galaxy-Book-2-and-unnamed-Lenovo-laptop.581222.0.html
Now these scores make more sense.
Considering they're a 28w-50 watt (at turbo) part one could say they're the closest to the M1 Pro's in specs. And the numbers are somewhat close to the 8 Core m1 pro, which is is fairly impressive considering its a "7nm-equivalent" x86.
This is not better than the i7-11800H, which was benched at 1690 / 10420 on Linux. However, this is not an H series chip - the thread count implies 8E cores and 4P cores. If Intel follows its 2021 playbook, the H series should be announced in April or May, and become widely available in the summer 2022. It will be interesting what the cores and uplift might be.
Geekbench is not a good benchmark because it is biased over processing tasks which cpu designers can optimise for. The real world behaviour of a cpu is very different from what Geekbench score indicates most of the time
Quote from: Kyriakos on November 25, 2021, 15:16:06
Geekbench is not a good benchmark because it is biased over processing tasks which cpu designers can optimise for. The real world behaviour of a cpu is very different from what Geekbench score indicates most of the time
"Tell me you have no education in Computer Science without telling".
Quote from: Kyriakos on November 25, 2021, 15:16:06
Geekbench is not a good benchmark because it is biased over processing tasks which cpu designers can optimise for. The real world behaviour of a cpu is very different from what Geekbench score indicates most of the time
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