
Motorola were quick to inform us that we are testing on pre-release RAZR i here -- software updates may arrive prior to the device does, however these figures below should provide you with a good estimate at exactly what the 2GHz Apple processor can perform. We have pitched it from the US-bound Android RAZR M, having a capable dual-core Snapdragon S4 which is 1.5GHz, and ZTE's Grand X IN, which houses Intel's 1.6MHz Medfield Z2460 and Android ICS.
| Motorola Android RAZR M | Motorola RAZR i | ZTE Grand X IN | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quadrant | 4,944 | 4,125 | 2,710 |
| Vellamo | 2,442 | 1,906 | 1,550 |
| SunSpider .9.1 (ms) | 1,951 | 1,062 | 1,355 |
| AnTuTu | 6,364 | 6,175 | N/A |
| GLBenchmark Egypt Offscreen (fps) | 56 | 41 | N/A |
| CF-Bench | 9,392 | 2,973 | 873 |
| SunSpider: lower scores be more effective | |||
What exactly do each one of these amounts mean Well, Intel's 2GHz processor is pretty capable. Even though the RAZR i only bests the RAZR M on SunSpider browser performance (something which Intel's been concentrating on using its mobile hardware), it is a substantial score difference. Otherwise, the Europe-bound RAZR skates pretty close, if behind the RAZR M's benchmarks. There is a hiccup around the CF-Bench score, something which we noted around the Grand X IN. While both ZTE and Motorola products are running Android 4., there's still a tangible difference during these early benchmarks -- possibly proof of both Motorola and Google's closeness and also the debut of Intel's faster 2GHz Medfield processor. We'll be trying out individuals energy-saving promises in the chipmaker within the next couple of days.
Filed under: Cell phones, Mobile
Motorola's RAZR i: benchmarking Intel's first 2GHz Medfield smartphone initially made an appearance on Engadget on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 07:40:00 EDT. Please visit our terms to be used of feeds.
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