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Thursday, 16 October 2014

Tegra K1 (Denver) and Nexus 9 benchmarked


The Tegra K1 comes in two versions – 32-bit and 64-bit – but they are more different than NVIDIA's naming scheme suggest. The one we've tested in the Xiaomi MiPad and that powers the NVIDIA Shield tablet is based on four Cortex-A15 cores.



The one in the new Nexus 9 tablet, however, is the interesting one – it's based on NVIDIA's first custom processor core design, dubbed Denver. The processor has only two cores but similar to Apple's Ax chipsets they are noticeably more powerful than their Cortex and Krait counterparts.


The Nexus 9 was just announced yesterday so there are no reviews out but there is a Geekbench 3 score. It shows impressive single-core performance – the 2.2GHz Cortex-A15 in the NVIDIA Shield manages 1,088 while the Denver core scores 1,903.


Geekbench 3 (single-core)



  • Nexus 9

    1807

  • iPhone 6

    1625

  • NVIDIA Shield

    1088

  • Moto X (2014)

    977

  • OnePlus One

    968

  • Sony Xperia Z2

    912

  • Galaxy S5

    910

  • HTC One (M8)

    907

  • LG G3

    902


The multi-core tests even out with the quad-cores, but still maintains a small lead over the likes of Snapdragon 801.


Geekbench 3 (multi-core)



  • NVIDIA Shield

    3258

  • Nexus 9

    3220

  • Moto X (2014)

    2915

  • iPhone 6

    2908

  • Galaxy S5

    2733

  • HTC One (M8)

    2659

  • OnePlus One

    2593

  • LG G3

    2264


Source | Via





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