Cortex A15: GPU Power Consumption - 3D Gaming Workload

ARM's Mali-T604 GPU is pretty quick, but similar to ARM's Cortex A15s it can definitely use a considerable amount of power to deliver that performance. Peak GPU power consumption tops out at just under 4W compared to ~1W for Qualcomm's Adreno 225. Even the Cortex A15s pull a decent amount of power in this test compared to the alternatives. It seems like that 4W max we keep seeing is likely the typical TDP for the Exynos 5250, anywhere from 1x - 4x what we get with Atom Z2760 and APQ8060A.

Task Energy - 3D Game 1 - Total Platform

Task Energy - 3D Game 1 - CPU Only

Task Energy - 3D Game 1 - GPU Only

The Mali-T604's performance advantage here comes at a price: total energy consumed is far higher than any of the competing solutions.

GPU Power Consumption - Max, Avg, Min Power

Max Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - Total Platform

Max Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - GPU Only

Max Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - CPU Only

Average Power Draw

Average Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - Total Platform

Average Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - GPU Only

Average Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - CPU Only

Minimum Power Draw

Min Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - Total Platform

Min Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - GPU Only

Min Power Draw - 3D Game 1 - CPU Only

Cortex A15: WebXPRT 2013 - Community Preview 1 Determining the TDP of Exynos 5 Dual
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  • Kidster3001 - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Samsung uses everyone's chips in their phones. Samsung, Qualcomm, TI... everyone's. I would not be surprised to see a Samsung phone with Atom in it eventually.
  • jeffkibuule - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    They've never used other non-Samsung SoCs by choice, especially in their high end phones. They only used Qualcomm MSM8960 in the US GS III because Qualcomm's separate baseband MDM9615 wasn't ready. As soon as it was, we saw the Galaxy Note II use Exynos again. Nvidia and TI chips have been used in the low end from Samsung, but that's not profitable to anyone.

    Intel needs a major design win from a tier one OEM willing to put its chip inside their flagship phone, and with most phone OEMs actually choosing to start designing their own ARM SoCs (including even LG and Huawei), that task is getting a lot harder than you might think.
  • felixyang - Saturday, January 5, 2013 - link

    some versions of Samsung's GS2 use TI's OMAP.
  • iwod - Saturday, January 5, 2013 - link

    Exactly like what is said above. If they have a choice they would rather use everything they produce themselves. Simply Because Wasted Fabs Space is expensive.
  • Icehawk - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    I find these articles very interesting - however I'd really like to see an aggregate score/total for power usage, IOW what is the area under the curve? As discussed being quicker to complete at higher power can be more efficient - however when looking at a graph it is very hard to see what the total area is. Giving a total wattage used during the test (ie, area under curve) would give a much easier metric to read and it is the important #, not what the voltage maxes or minimums at but the overall usage over time/process IMO.
  • extide - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    There are indeed several graphs that display total power used in joules, which is the area under the curve of the watts graphs. Maybe you missed them ?
  • jwcalla - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    That's what the bar charts are showing.
  • GeorgeH - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    It's already there. A Watt is a Joule/Second, so the area under the power/time graphs is measured in Watts * Seconds = Joules.
  • Veteranv2 - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Another Intel PR Article, it is getting really sad on this website.

    Now since you are still using Win8 which is garbage for ARM. Please us the correct software platform for ARM chips. I'd love to see those power measurements then.

    Anandtech did it again. Pick the most favorable software platform for Intel, give the least favorable to ARM.
    Way to go! Again....

    Intel PR at its best...
  • Veteranv2 - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Oh wait its even better!
    They used totally different screens with almost 4 times the pixels on the nexus 10 and then says it requires more power to do benchmarks. Hahaha, this review gave me a good laugh. Even worse then the previous ones.

    This might explain the lack of product overviews at the start.

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