The cpu in the Nexus 10 is based on the newer Arm a15 architecture, compared to the older a9 cores used by previous generations of tablets (Tegra 2/3, Exynos 4x, Omap 4, etc). In addition to using the new a15 design, the Nexus 10 cpu is also clocked higher than many existing tablets; e.g. the Nexus 7 uses a Tegra 3 chip running at 1.3Ghz, compared to the 1.7Ghz Exynos 5 in the Nexus 10.
So the Nexus 10 has fewer but faster cores, and performs better in all but the most heavily threaded applications.
That pretty much sums it up. I not in the know on processor comparisons but why is a dual core processor giving better results than most of the quad core processors on the market right now.
Why are two Ferraris better than four Honda Civics? If you can grasp that, you can understand.
are we talking about maintenance costs? ease of getting the groceries home? maybe gas mileage?
Most of the higher-end smart phones out there have been using ARM Cortex A9 cores for about two years now. As I understand it, regardless of the brand of processor (Snapdragon, OMAP,etc.), the actual cores have been A9's. This is not to be confused with Apple's intentionally misleading naming convention for the processors in its devices. Note that Apple's "A6" processor actually uses modified dual A9 cores.
The A15 cores in the Nexus 10 are the next generation of ARM Cortex cores that give a massive boost to things like memory throughput. It's a generational leap ahead.
Most of the higher-end smart phones out there have been using ARM Cortex A9 cores for about two years now. As I understand it, regardless of the brand of processor (Snapdragon, OMAP,etc.), the actual cores have been A9's. This is not to be confused with Apple's intentionally misleading naming convention for the processors in its devices. Note that Apple's "A6" processor actually uses modified dual A9 cores.
The A15 cores in the Nexus 10 are the next generation of ARM Cortex cores that give a massive boost to things like memory throughput. It's a generational leap ahead.
simple answer is Architecture.That pretty much sums it up. I not in the know on processor comparisons but why is a dual core processor giving better results than most of the quad core processors on the market right now.
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None. we are talking about the speed and the design here.are we talking about maintenance costs? ease of getting the groceries home? maybe gas mileage?
Snapdragon cores are not derivatives of cortex designs and were designed in house by Qualcomm. Scorpion is comparable to A9 but doesn't use the A9 core, and Krait is comparable to A15 but isn't a derivative of it. Apple A5 used cortex A9 cores but apple A6 uses a modified A15 or their own from scratch design (which one isn't clear).
I believe OMAP, Tegra and Exynos do use cortex cores, unmodified.
Wait.. My Lumia 920 has a dual core Krait, so if that's comparable to an A15, then that's pretty excellent I suppose (?)
So the Krait/Snapdragon on my Lumia is a generation ahead of the Cortex A9/Tegra 3 on my Nexus 7?
From the point of view of the CPU, yes. I think the GPU on the Tegra 3 is still considerably superior.
Krait is a fully out of order, triple decode, symmetric reservation station system core. If I remember features correctly, it's somewhat advanced compared to A15 and far advanced to A9.
This is how powerful they are, ranging from most powerful to least...