HTC admits cheating on benchmark scores with the HTC One (M8)

smooth4lyfe

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Sep 16, 2012
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Now I know benchmark scores are not a big determinative factor, but I found this article interesting

HTC admits its High Performance Mode pumped up benchmark scores for the HTC One (M8)

When the HTC One (M8) was run through the AnTuTu 4 benchmark test, the phone scored a whopping 38,815. That topped the 34,898 scored by the Samsung Galaxy S5. The Sony Xperia Z2 scored an impressive 32,768 and the LG G Pro 2 produced a score of 30,068.

But when the HTC One (M8) was put through the cheat-proof AnTuTu X, the results were much different. The Samsung Galaxy S5 was on top with a score of 35,357. The Sony Xperia Z2 finished second with a benchmark score of 32,508 while the LG G Pro 2 was next with a score of 29,787. The HTC One (M8)? HTC's new flagship had a score of 27,171.
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Antutu 4 = Original Test (with the cheated results)
Antutu X = Cheat-Proof Test
an.png
 

Skyway

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Nov 8, 2010
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Re: HTC admits cheating on benchmark scores with the HTC One M8

It's a lot better of them to admit it unlike Samsung who tried to hide it

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UJ95x

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Aug 26, 2013
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Re: HTC admits cheating on benchmark scores with the HTC One M8

A lot of OEMs cheat on benchmarks now. Samsung did the same with the GS4, I believe. Stopped paying attention to them...

Sent from my Galaxy S4 running SlimKat 4.4.2
 

UJ95x

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Re: HTC admits cheating on benchmark scores with the HTC One M8

It's a lot better of them to admit it unlike Samsung who tried to hide it

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True, but it doesn't look like they did it with the S5 :)

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Skyway

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Well HTC didn't do it with the m7 and samsung did with the gs4, now it's the other way around. I'll call it even lol

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Habiib

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For some reason this seems like it's 2013 again. Some things never change around here. Regardless, HTC gave a pretty granular explanation of how the processor clock speeds are managed. Also, if I understand their description, any process can explicitly request or maximize the clock speeds.

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Audux

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Bottomline, why did they decide to do that in the first place? Too risky, but it wasn't nice in my case.

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ErnstMach

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Aug 28, 2013
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It is cool that you can enable the benchmark boost mode yourself to get that performance 24/7 though

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UJ95x

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It is cool that you can enable the benchmark boost mode yourself to get that performance 24/7 though

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It's probably not noticeable enough to warrant the tradeoff for battery life

Sent from my Galaxy S4 running SlimKat 4.4.2
 

LindtChocolate

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Apparently, CNET's coverage was wrong. Mobiletechreview said in their review that the high performance mode was only in the Dev options of pre-release devices and not the consumer ones

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That's disappointing. I guess you can only access extra power by rooting.
 

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