I crown the iPhone 5 speed king after pitting it against every other
iPhone we've tested, along with today's top Android phones.
The iPhone 5 looks to be the fastest smartphone we've ever tested at PCMag.com.
With
its mysterious, Apple-designed A6 processor, the iPhone 5 is unique in
the world of smartphones. Most high-end phones nowadays run on one of
two architectures: ARM's Cortex-A9, which is used by Nvidia, Texas
Instruments and others, and Qualcomm's Krait. But the A6, as AnandTech
discovered, is something completely different—an ARM-compatible
system-on-a-chip designed, top to bottom, by Apple.
We'll
focus on five tests here. First the browser benchmarks: Sunspider,
Browsermark, and Guimark 3 Bitmap all test Web browser performance.
Sunspider is about JavaScript, Guimark is about interactive HTML5, and
Browsermark is an overall browser benchmark. Different browsers will
score differently on the same phone. We test with the default browser,
because that's what most people use.
(Since
you're wondering about Chrome, which is an optional download on Android
phones, it gives similar Browsermark results to the default browser on
the Samsung Galaxy S III.)
The
iPhone 4S running the Safari browser in iOS 6.0 on a dual-core 800MHz
A5 processor is about on par with leading Android 4.0 phones like
the Samsung Galaxy S III and the Motorola Droid RAZR M, both of which
are using 1.5GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processors, or their equivalent.
Obviously, the difference is that Safari is a faster browser than the
Android browser.
The iPhone 5 takes
things to the next level with a processor that can compete with the S4
along with the fast browser. Its Browsermark score is 80 percent higher,
and it shows much quicker Sunspider times. GUIMark, like most mobile
on-screen graphics tests, maxes out at 60 frames per second because
that's as fast as your screen updates.
Geekbench is
a processor benchmark, which tests the basic components of a phone's
system. Here you see less of a difference, but it's still there. Look at
the subscores. The A6 and the other processors do math about as fast as
each other, but the "memory" and "stream" scores, both of which test
loading data in and out of RAM, come out much better on the Apple
device.
Mix
together the two sets and you see how much of a difference the Safari
browser makes, but also that the iPhone 5 still wins with the browser
taken out of the picture.
GLBenchmark
2.5 is a graphics benchmark, creating and walking through simulated
game scenes. Performance in the "onscreen" tests is dependent on a
phone's graphics power but also on screen resolution (you can do more
frames per second if you're pushing fewer pixels.) The "offscreen" tests
are purely graphics-crunching power. The Galaxy S III has 26 percent
more pixels than the iPhone 5 (921,600 to the iPhone's 727,400) but as
you can see, in the "offscreen" measure of raw graphics performance, the
iPhone 5 doubles the Galaxy S III's result. It's simply a more powerful
phone.
A phone's hardware
performance can't be taken in isolation, but it's definitely a piece of
the puzzle. Based on these benchmarks, the iPhone 5 lives up to the
promise of being twice as fast as the iPhone 4S. It's also, for now, the
fastest handheld computer sold in the US.
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