![]() These scores obliterate the Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio ’s 5,820 and handily surpass the. Geekbench is a benchmark that reflects what actual users. On the Geekbench 5.4 multi-core test, the M1 Pro and M1 Max scored 12,477 and 12,683, respectively. It’s an updated architecture with better video encoding and 64 execution units. Benchmark results for a MacBook Pro (13-inch Retina Early 2015) with an Intel Core i5-5257U processor. Includes updated CPU workloads and new Compute workloads that model real-world tasks and applications. Intel’s CPU database does not list a part that matches the specs of Apple’s new model exactly, but it most likely features the G7 variant of Intel’s latest integrated GPU. On Geekbench 5.4, which measures overall performance, the MacBook Pro 2022 scored 8,911 on the multicore portion of the test. This is up from a 64GB maximum with the M1 Max. The old model’s Iris Plus had 48 execution units and 128MB of embedded DRAM. The Geekbench benchmarks above were for a new MacBook Pro with 96GB RAM insideand that does correlate with the new M2 Max MacBook Pro model. The new and old graphics were both confusingly named “Intel Iris Plus” but they’re quite different. ![]() The new MacBook Pro also has a new integrated graphics processor. It has a significant advantage with eight cores, double that of the processors in the 13-inch models. On Geekbench 5.5, the MacBook Pro 14-inch with an M2 Max chip with 12 CPU cores and 38 GPU cores notched 1,929 and 15,100, respectively. When you consider that the new model has a maximum boost clock speed of 3.8GHz and the old one went up to 4.1GHz, that’s fairly impressive.Īs you can see, the 16-inch MacBook Pro leaves all the 13-inch models in the dust. With a Geekbench 5 score of 4480, that is just over a 14 percent improvement. The headline is that the new M1 Max powered machines are only beaten by some Mac Pros and iMacs using Intels high-end Xeon chips. When it comes to multi-core performance, the new MacBook Pro provides a modest increase over the model it replaces. The first Geekbench benchmarks for the new Apple MacBook Pro 2021 are in and they make for impressive reading. But as you’ll see, the bigger laptop separates itself when it comes to multi-core performance. Benchmark results for the Mac Pro with an Intel Xeon 5150 processor can be found below. It’s also hard to ignore that a single core of the new 13-inch MacBook Pro’s processor is able to keep pace with a single core of the 16-inch MacBook Pro’s processor, despite significantly lower core and boost clock speeds.
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