Apple Shooting for the Stars: x86 Incumbents Beware

The previous pages were written ahead of Apple officially announcing the new M1 chip. We already saw the A14 performing outstandingly and outperforming the best that Intel has to offer. The new M1 should perform notably above that.

We come back to a few of Apple’s slides during the presentations as to what to expect in terms of performance and efficiency. Particularly the performance/power curves are the most detail that Apple is sharing at this moment in time:

In this graphic, Apple showcases the new M1 chip featuring a CPU power consumption peak of around 18W. The competing PC laptop chip here is peaking at the 35-40W range so certainly these are not single-threaded performance figures, but rather whole-chip multi-threaded performance. We don’t know if this is comparing M1 to an AMD Renoir chip or an Intel ICL or TGL chip, but in both cases the same general verdict applies:

Apple’s usage of a significantly more advanced microarchitecture that offers significant IPC, enabling high performance at low core clocks, allows for significant power efficiency gains versus the incumbent x86 players. The graphic shows that at peak-to-peak, M1 offers around a 40% performance uplift compared to the existing competitive offering, all whilst doing it at 40% of the power consumption.

Apple’s comparison of random performance points is to be criticised, however the 10W measurement point where Apple claims 2.5x the performance does make some sense, as this is the nominal TDP of the chips used in the Intel-based MacBook Air. Again, it’s thanks to the power efficiency characteristics that Apple has been able to achieve in the mobile space that the M1 is promised to showcase such large gains – it certainly matches our A14 data.

Don't forget about the GPU

Today we mostly covered the CPU side of things as that’s where the unprecedented industry shift is happening. However, we shouldn’t forget about the GPU, as the new M1 represents Apple’s first-time introduction of their custom designs into the Mac space.

Apple’s performance and power efficiency claims here are really lacking context as we have no idea what their comparison point is. I won’t try to theorise here as there’s just too many variables at play, and we don’t know enough details.

What we do know is that in the mobile space, Apple is absolutely leading the pack in terms of performance and power efficiency. The last time we tested the A12Z the design was more than able to compete and beat integrated graphics designs. But since then we’ve seen more significant jumps from both AMD and Intel.

Performance Leadership?

Apple claims the M1 to be the fastest CPU in the world. Given our data on the A14, beating all of Intel’s designs, and just falling short of AMD’s newest Zen3 chips – a higher clocked Firestorm above 3GHz, the 50% larger L2 cache, and an unleashed TDP, we can certainly believe Apple and the M1 to be able to achieve that claim.

This moment has been brewing for years now, and the new Apple Silicon is both shocking, but also very much expected. In the coming weeks we’ll be trying to get our hands on the new hardware and verify Apple’s claims.

Intel has stagnated itself out of the market, and has lost a major customer today. AMD has shown lots of progress lately, however it’ll be incredibly hard to catch up to Apple’s power efficiency. If Apple’s performance trajectory continues at this pace, the x86 performance crown might never be regained.

From Mobile to Mac: What to Expect?
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  • Jasonovich - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    Active Cooling in wafer thin Apple Mac notebooks? You got to be kidding me!
    The company ethos relies on 99% marketing and 1% substance and a massive cult following of Libdroids, which will always net in the converted but I'm a pagan and I will eat my sock if the phone CPU proves me wrong!
  • Ppietra - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    the MacBook Pro has Active Cooling
  • Billrey - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    Happy sock eating then.
  • SuperSunnyDay - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    I don't disagree with your claim about the amount of marketing that Apple engage in, but you are seriously misdirected by prejudice if you actually believe your assertion of only 1% substance. The M1 is a revolutionary component, and Apple's hardware and software are pretty much the definition of state of the art at present - who else has any claim to be more advanced in the mass market? Wake up and remove your blinkers. The truth is what is important, not what you want to believe.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    @hecksagon - "Once the iPhone gets heat soaked performance starts to tank pretty quickly."
    ...that's also true of the Intel processors in mobile systems; especially the Coffee / Ice Lakes.

    The point isn't to compare A14 in an iPhone to an i7 in a laptop, it's to let you know what Apple's architecture is capable of on a theoretical level - then we'll see how the finished product puts that into practice *when the finished product arrives*.
  • iphonebestgamephone - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Atleast geekbench isnt perfomance per watt
  • vladx - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Yep seriously disappointed on Andrei for writing such a lazy article.
  • ikjadoon - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    brahhh...if we could delete comments on Anandtech, this should be the first candidate.

    vladx, you realize this comment will be here in 10 years when people are quoting this article on the x86 demise?

    Hi, everyone from 2025. Yes, we know.
  • vladx - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    Lol ok, good luck with that if you think ARM Macs and Macbooks will cause the demise of x86 with 30 years of software library. In 10 years from now, you're gonna look back and wish you could've deleted your foolish statement.
  • Kurosaki - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    AArch64 emulates x86 faster than x86 runs software natively. Let that sink in Vlad... Let it sink in for a moment.
    If the x86 gang don't do something drastically, my next gaming rig will be an ARM one. PC and Win on ARM for sure.

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