Apple's ability to control the entire information chain, down to the point of limiting leaks, appears to be gradually slipping as it grows as a company. Case in point are the numerous hardware and performance leaks surrounding the newly launched iPhone 4S. Little did we know that several weeks ago we were staring at photos of the 4S' PCB, and more recently we've seen the first performance results from Apple's first A5 based smartphone thanks to a few eager users around the web. We've compiled these results here from various sources (all linked below) and compared them to our existing database of tests.

The results are pretty much as expected. Javascript performance finally catches up to Tegra 2 based Honeycomb devices, while general CPU performance is significantly higher than the iPhone 4. I suspect Ice Cream Sandwich will bridge the Android smartphone gap (the Honeycomb equipped Gtab 8.9 is here to give you an idea of where a more modern Android browser ends up).

Keep in mind that all of these tests measure performance of the software stack in addition to the hardware. In particular the web browser tests depend largely on browser optimizations, which is why we see differences between similar hardware running different browser versions. Also note that all results were run at stock, with the stock browser. Finally, although these browser tests were captured on video we'll still be running our official tests once our 4Ses arrive and will update accordingly.

Update: We made a mistake in our original presentation of the SunSpider numbers and compared the iPhone 4S' 0.9.1 results to our existing database of 0.9.0 scores. We have since updated the graph to compare directly to our 0.9.1 numbers. The rest of the results are unaffected. I apologize for the confusion.
 
The distribution is a lot tighter than before, however the relative standings don't really change. I still fully expect ICS to narrow a lot of this gap between iOS and Android devices - if we look at the lone Honeycomb result you get an indication of that.
 
Note that we always run our benchmarks on a stock OS/browser configuration. 

SunSpider Javascript Benchmark 0.9.1 - Stock Browser

Rightware BrowserMark

Using some of the integer and fp tests of published Geekbench scores we can already conclude that Apple is shipping a lower clocked A5 in the iPhone 4S than it does in the iPad 2. This naturally makes sense as the iPhone 4S has a much smaller 5.25 Whr battery. Based on the Geekbench results it looks like the iPad 2 is clocked around 25% higher than the iPhone 4S, pegging the latter's clock speed at 800MHz.

Geekbench - Overall Results

Geekbench - Processor integer performance

A lower clock not only means higher yields from the factory, but likely a lower operating voltage as well. Dropping a CPU's core voltage, yields a greater-than-linear decrease in power consumption, making the marginal loss in clock speed a good choice. At a lower operating frequency than its Android competitors, Apple does have to exploit its strengths in software to avoid any tangible performance penalties. Apple has traditionally done this very well in the past, so I don't expect the loss of frequency to be a huge deal to the few who do cross-shop iOS and Android.

Unsurprisingly, memory bandwidth doesn't appear to have gone up either compared to the iPad 2's A5 (taking into account scaling due to CPU clock increases). The Samsung part number on the iPad 2's A5 indicates two LPDDR2-800 die on package, it's safe to assume that whatever Apple clocked the memory interface at in the iPad 2 remains unchanged in the iPhone 4S.

The GPU results tell a similar story courtesy of some early GLBenchmark 2.1 results. The 960 x 640 results are useless as they are bound by vsync at ~60 fps. Luckly GLBenchmark 2.1 added an off-screen render mode at 1280 x 720 where we can really see the differences between the iPad 2 and iPhone 4S A5 implementations:

GLBenchmark 2.1 - Egypt - Offscreen

GLBenchmark 2.1 - Pro - Offscreen

Here the iPad 2 holds a ~21% performance advantage, which once again I assume to be all related to clock speed. Also note the huge advantage over the existing iPhone 4. The GPU power in the 4S should be more than enough to run any well written, current generation title at well north of 30 fps on its display.

We'll be reviewing the iPhone 4S in the coming weeks, stay tuned!

Source: GLBenchmark Database, Geekbench Database, Macrumors

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  • palehorse - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    Please wake me up when you have:

    1) ICS vs. iOS
    2) ALL available browsers for both platrforms
    3) Nexus Prime vs. iPhone4S

    Until then, the benchmarks are practically worthless, and they're absolutely biased!
  • steven75 - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    How are they biased? You can get a 4S in 6 days and iOS 5 tomorrow. Prime hasn't even been announced yet and ICS won't be on Android phones other than Prime for another 6-8 months.

    Sometimes reality isn't what you'd like it to be, but there it is.
  • deV14nt - Wednesday, October 12, 2011 - link

    ICS will be on several phones by the end of the year. Samsung and Google won't announce ICS this month without releasing a phone to go along with it. And the rest of the phone manufacturers won't sit around twiddling their thumbs while Samsung steals all the glory. It will likely be a matter of weeks between the first phone and the second. Not "6-8 months".
  • doobydoo - Sunday, October 16, 2011 - link

    Still doesn't exist yet. Which is the point.
  • DuduMaroja - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    Sorry but my galaxy S2 is faster then this

    http://i.imgur.com/tMeDX.png

    ps: not overclocked!
  • tomhoward - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    Glad it's not just me :-)
  • doobydoo - Sunday, October 16, 2011 - link

    Depends on the browser. It's probably identical if you used the stock browser.

    All phones would be quicker if they switched browser. So the results are still reflective.
  • doubledeej - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    Why no WP7.5 Mango phones on this chart? It would be nice to see how its browser stacks up.
  • vrundmc - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    Just ran SunSpider on my Epic Touch 4G - stock - and came up with 2332 using Dolphin. Meh. I would rather have a GS2 over an iPhone anyday...I have used them extensively and prefer the Google experience and integration.
  • mscrivo - Tuesday, October 11, 2011 - link

    I just ran SunSpider 0.91 on my Bold 9900 and it scored a 2609ms overall score, puts it in second place right behind the iPhone 4S.

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