iPhone Performance Across Generations

 

We did this in the iPhone 5 review, so I thought I'd continue the trend here. For those users who have no desire to leave iOS and are looking to find the best time to upgrade, these charts offer a unique historical look at iPhone performance over the generations. I included almost all iPhone revisions here, the sole exception being the iPhone 3G which I couldn't seem to find. 
 
All of the devices were updated to the latest supported version of iOS. That's iOS 7 for the iPhone 4 and later, iOS 6.1.3 for the iPhone 3GS and iOS 3.1.3 for the original iPhone.
 
At its keynote, Apple talked about the iPhone 5s offering up to 41x the CPU performance of the original iPhone. Looking at SunSpider however, we get a very different story:

iPhone Generations - SunSpider 1.0

Performance improved by a factor of 100x compared to the original iPhone. You can cut that in half if the iPhone could run iOS 4. Needless to say, Apple's CPU performance estimates aren't unreasonable. We've come a long way since the days when ARM11 cores were good enough.

Even compared to a relatively modern phone like the iPhone 4, the jump to a 5s is huge. The gap isn't quite at the level of an order of magnitude, but it's quickly approaching it. Using the single core iPhone 4 under iOS 7 just feels incredibly slow. Starting with the 4S things get a lot better, but I'd say the iPhone 4 is at the point now where it's starting to feel too slow even for normal consumers (at least with iOS 7 installed).

iPhone Generations - Browsermark 2.0

Browsermark 2.0 gives us a good indication of less CPU bound performance gains. Here we see over a 5x increase in performance compared to the original iPhone, and an 83% increase compared to the iPhone 4.

I wanted to have a closer look at raw CPU performance so I turned to Geekbench 3. Unfortunately Geekbench 3 won't run on anything older than iOS 6, so the original iPhone bows out of this test.

iPhone Generations - Geekbench 3 (Single Threaded)

Single threaded performance scaled by roughly 9x from the 3GS to the iPhone 5s. The improvement since the iPhone 4/4S days is around 6.5x. Single threaded performance often influences snappiness and UI speed/feel, so it's definitely an important vector to scale across.

iPhone Generations - Geekbench 3 (Multi Threaded)

Take into account multithreaded performance and the increase over the 3GS is even bigger, almost 17x now.

The only 3D test I could get to reliably run across all of the platforms (outside the original iPhone) was Basemark X. Again I had issues getting Basemark X running in offscreen mode on iOS 7 so all of the tests here are run at each device's native resolution. In the case of the 3GS to 4 transition, that means a performance regression as the 3GS had a much lower display resolution to deal with.

iPhone Generations - Basemark X (Onscreen)

Apple has scaled GPU performance pretty much in line with CPU performance over the years. The 5s scores 15x the frame rate of the iPhone 4, at a higher resolution too.

iPhone 5s vs. Bay Trail

I couldn't help but run Intel's current favorite mobile benchmark on the iPhone 5s. WebXPRT by Principled Technologies is a collection of browser based benchmarks that use HTML5 and js to simulate a number of workloads (photo editing, face detection, stocks dashboard and offline notes).

iPhone 5s vs. Bay Trail - WebXPRT (Chrome/Mobile Safari)

Granted we're comparing across platforms/browsers here, but the 5s as a platform does extremely well in Intel's favorite benchmark. The 5c by comparison performs a lot more like what we'd expect from a smartphone platform. The iPhone 5s is in a league of its own here. While I don't expect performance equalling the Atom Z3770 across the board, the fact that Apple is getting this close (with two fewer cores at that) is a testament to the work done in Cupertino.

At its launch event Apple claimed the A7 offered desktop class CPU performance. If it really is performance competitive with Bay Trail, I think that statement is a fair one to make. We're not talking about Haswell or even Ivy Bridge levels of desktop performance, but rather something close to mobile Core 2 Duo class. I've broken down the subtests in the table below:

WebXPRT Performance (time in ms, lower is better)
Chrome/Mobile Safari Photo Effects Face Detection Stocks Offline Notes
Apple iPhone 5s (Apple A7 1.3GHz) 878.9 ms 1831.4 ms 436.1 ms 604.6 ms
Intel Bay Trail FFRD (Atom Z3770 1.46GHz) 693.5 ms 1557.0 ms 542.9 ms 737.3 ms
AMD A4-5000 (1.5GHz) 411.2 ms 2349.5 ms 719.1 ms 880.7 ms
Apple iPhone 5c (Apple A6 1.3GHz) 1987.6 ms 4119.6 ms 763.6 ms 1747.6 ms

It's not a clean sweep for the iPhone 5s, but keep in mind that we are comparing to the best AMD and Intel have to offer in this space. I suspect part of why this is close is because both of those companies have been holding back a bit (there's no rush to build the fastest low margin parts), but it doesn't change reality.

 

CPU Performance GPU Architecture & Performance
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  • robinthakur - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Agreed, the screen on my old galaxy 3 was awful enough for me to dump it and get a iPhone 5. Weird bluey-green tinting, incredibly fuzzy text, unreadable in sunlight and over saturation. The trick with turning on only the active pixels is a nice one, but I'd still rather have an accurately calibrated screen that doesn't present content incorrectly.
  • Gorgenapper - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    This was the reason why I passed on the Galaxy S3, even though a lot of review sites were touting it as having super crisp images and text, eye popping colors, and so on. I saw a demo unit in person, and the screen was simply not comparable to that of my iPhone 4S. Skin tones were orange on the GS3, yellow images were greenish, and through all of it I could notice the pixellation from the pentile arrangement of the LEDs. Also, the demo unit had screen burn in after only a week despite the display changing every second or so, while the demo units for the iPhones were still going strong and bright. AMOLED is crap, give me LCD any day.
  • robinthakur - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    You aren't comparing like with like though. The people who want a crazy 41MP feature phone with a camera that juts out of the back (meaning it won't lie flat) are not the same ones that want a premium iPhone. In truth, I don't think there will be a big demand for it. Yes I'm sure that the picture performance on a 1020 would absolutely wipe the floor with the camera in the 5S, but I would never consider buying one because it looks ugly and impractical and harkens back to the bad old days of phone design where function bested form IMO!
  • KeypoX - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Apple's biggest advantage is being a second mover. Not a first. They have never been first in anything.

    Not first in:
    Touch screen device/phone
    App store
    Tablet
    Finger print reader
    High res screens

    The biggest advantage is they are SECOND movers and take these devices to the next level.
  • dugbug - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Panties in a bunch? WTF is up with people and apple.
  • Gridlock - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    The Newton alone makes most of your arguments laughable.
  • André - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    The iPhone 4 was the first phone to ship with more than 300 ppi screen 960 x 640 3,5".

    They were the first with FireWire, USB, Thunderbolt, DisplayPort and shipping a product with an PCIe SSD.

    First to ship a device with an Rogue implementation and going with a fully custom ARMv8 64-bit processor.

    If anything, they are not second movers and because they are so vertically integrated they can control both hardware and software.
  • code65536 - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    So is it safe to assume the A7 has an out-of-order execution core?
  • ViRGE - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    Swift was already OOE.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - link

    A6/Swift already did. A7 may be more out of order, it's not an all or nothing thing.

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