In the official announcement of the two models, Apple made a point of saying that the new iPad Pro is more powerful than many Windows notebooks with the slogan “your next computer is not a computer” to reinforce the processing power of the new devices.
Today we have proof that the new iPad is actually much more powerful than its “brothers”. The results were shown by the Antutu Benchmark V8 for iOS. To calculate these values, the benchmark test collected data between March 1st and 31st. Compared to previous generations of the iPad Pro, the new model did very well, see:
As you can see in the ranking, the 12.9-inch iPad Pro (4) outperformed the previous generation thanks to the A12Z, however, the 11-inch iPad Pro (4) was below the iPad Pro (3) with the A12X Bionic. Although this seems strange, after all, the difference in score is 715253 from the recent launch versus 716322 from the previous iPad the difference is totally normal.
According to AnTuTu, the difference in score comes from the advantages of storing the older iPad. The fact is that the A12Z has two GPU cores based on the A12X, so there are eight CPU and GPU cores while the previous generation had only 8 on the CPU and 7 active on the GPU, showing a small change but that points out that storage it was the only determining factor in this difference.
It is worth remembering that the eighth core GPU of the A12X was recently discovered, but is disabled in the previous generation of iPods, which could make them as powerful as the previous generation.
VIA
Today we have proof that the new iPad is actually much more powerful than its “brothers”. The results were shown by the Antutu Benchmark V8 for iOS. To calculate these values, the benchmark test collected data between March 1st and 31st. Compared to previous generations of the iPad Pro, the new model did very well, see:
As you can see in the ranking, the 12.9-inch iPad Pro (4) outperformed the previous generation thanks to the A12Z, however, the 11-inch iPad Pro (4) was below the iPad Pro (3) with the A12X Bionic. Although this seems strange, after all, the difference in score is 715253 from the recent launch versus 716322 from the previous iPad the difference is totally normal.
According to AnTuTu, the difference in score comes from the advantages of storing the older iPad. The fact is that the A12Z has two GPU cores based on the A12X, so there are eight CPU and GPU cores while the previous generation had only 8 on the CPU and 7 active on the GPU, showing a small change but that points out that storage it was the only determining factor in this difference.
It is worth remembering that the eighth core GPU of the A12X was recently discovered, but is disabled in the previous generation of iPods, which could make them as powerful as the previous generation.
VIA