Wednesday 13 August 2014

Samsung Galaxy Alpha benchmarked

Tags: Samsung , Android , Rumors



Samsung is expanding its flagship lineup with the newly official Samsung Galaxy Alpha and the rumored Galaxy S5 LTE-A version. Both are powered by the Exynos 5 Octa 5430 chipset, the one rumored to be at the heart of the Galaxy Note 4 too.




The S5 LTE-A we're talking of shouldn't be confused with the Snapdragon 805-powered Galaxy S5 LTE-A, which has a QHD screen (matching the LG G3). This yet-unannounced Galaxy S5 LTE-A G901F (octa-core) has a 5.1" 1080p screen instead (confusing, huh?).




The Galaxy Alpha has a 4.7" 720p screen, so its chipset (or just the GPU) may have been down-clocked since it doesn't need the performance but needs to tread lightly on the 1,860mAh battery.




We ran AnTuTu on the Galaxy Alpha and used a leaked score for the Galaxy S5 LTE-A (both S805 and Exynos versions) to get a feel for the new chipset.




AnTuTu 4




Higher is better is better







  • Galaxy S5 LTE-A (rumored)



    39712



  • Oppo Find 7



    38484



  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha



    38119



  • HTC One (M8)



    37009



  • Galaxy S5 (Snapdragon 801)



    36018



  • Galaxy S5 LTE-A (S805)



    35411



  • Sony Xperia Z2



    33182



  • LG G3 (3GB/32GB)



    30482






The Exynos 5 Octa 5430 chipset has four Cortex-A15 and four Cortex-A7 cores, all eight of which can work simultaneously. It's paired with a hexa-core Mali-T628 and has a 32-bit dual-channel access to LPDDR3e RAM.




Source 1Source 2 (in Korean)









from gsmarena http://ift.tt/1l2q3EH

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