SPEC2017 - Multi-Core Performance

While we knew that the Apple M1 would do extremely well in single-threaded performance, the design’s strengths are also in its power-efficiency which should directly translate to exceptionally good multi-threaded performance in power limited designs. We noted that although Apple doesn’t really publish any TDP figure, we estimate that the M1 here in the Mac mini behaves like a 20-24W TDP chip.

We’re including Intel’s newest Tiger Lake system with an i7-1185G7 at 28W, an AMD Ryzen 7 4800U at 15W, and a Ryzen 9 4900HS at 35W as comparison points. It’s to be noted that the actual power consumption of these devices should exceed that of their advertised TDPs, as it doesn’t account for DRAM or VRMs.

SPECint2017(C/C++) Rate-N Estimated Scores

In SPECint2017 rate, the Apple M1 battles with AMD’s chipsets, with the results differing depending on the workload, sometimes winning, sometimes losing.

SPECfp2017(C/C++) Rate-N Estimated Scores

In the fp2017 rate results, we see similar results, with the Apple M1 battling it out with AMD’s higher-end laptop chip, able to beat the lower TDP part and clearly stay ahead of Intel’s design.

SPEC2017(C/C++) Rate-N Estimated Total

In the overall multi-core scores, the Apple M1 is extremely impressive. On integer workloads, it still seems that AMD’s more recent Renoir-based designs beat the M1 in performance, but only in the integer workloads and at a notably higher TDP and power consumption.

Apple’s lead against Intel’s Tiger Lake SoC at 28W here is indisputable, and shows the reason as to why Apple chose to abandon their long-term silicon partner of 15 years. The M1 not only beats the best Intel has to offer in this market-segment, but does so at less power.

I also included multi-threaded scores of the M1 when ignoring the 4 efficiency cores of the system. Here although it’s an “8-core” design, the heterogeneous nature of the CPUs means that performance is lop-sided towards the big cores. That doesn’t mean that the efficiency cores are absolutely weak: Using them still increases total throughput by 20-33%, depending on the workload, favouring compute-heavy tasks.

Overall, Apple doesn’t just deliver a viable silicon alternative to AMD and Intel, but actually something that’s well outperforms them both in absolute performance as well as power efficiency. Naturally, in higher power-level, higher-core count systems, the M1 can’t keep up to AMD and Intel designs, but that’s something Apple likely will want to address with subsequent designs in that category over the next 2 years.

SPEC2006 & 2017: Industry Standard - ST Performance Rosetta2: x86-64 Translation Performance
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  • Kuhar - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    Don`t bother, you won`t convince an apple fanboy.
  • Hrunga_Zmuda - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    Or the Apple haters.
  • Hrunga_Zmuda - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    You think you're telling people something? They know the fantastic performance of the M1 is in the single-threaded category. They said that from the keynote on Nov. 10th to today.

    If you think Apple will never go for threaded performance in future chips, or discreet GPUs, you are living in a delusion.
  • BushLin - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    Calm down dear, I was just addressing "The parts that beat the M1 have way more cores, a higher thermal budget, and higher clock" which simply isn't an accurate reflection of even the limited benchmarks in the article, let alone other real world scenarios which aren't a quick burst of single threaded activity.
  • chris.parker@flipingreat.com - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    Very good review with Industrial benchmarks. Apple first to get the 5nm out there, must upset a few to start.... I understand a gamer reading this would be blinded by a Noisy laptop, kicking out hairdryer volumes of hot air, from a none aluminum styled case, but you gotta admit... pretty dawn good, for a tweaked iPhone 12 CPU.
  • BushLin - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    I would guess a gamer's Dell/Lenovo/Microsoft laptop to be silent while browsing this site since gaming laptops are for freaks.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    Weird flex but okay
  • BushLin - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    Do you ever read the comment people are replying to?
  • Spunjji - Monday, November 23, 2020 - link

    I was responding specifically to "gaming laptops are for freaks". As I said, weird flex.
  • tempestglen - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    4C8T Zen3 CPU will be beat badly by M1, when 16" MBP with 8 big cores comes out, game over for Zen3.

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