GPU Power Consumption - 3D Gaming Workload

While we don't yet have final GPU benchmarks under Windows RT/8 that we can share numbers from, the charts below show power consumption in the same DX title running through roughly the same play path. Tegra 3 remains the fastest in this test, followed by Adreno 225 and finally the PowerVR SGX 545/Atom solution. Power consumption roughly follows that same order, however Tegra 3 burns much more power in delivering that performance than either of the competitors. I'd be really interested to see how some of the higher performing Imagination cores do here.

Krait: WebXPRT & TouchXPRT 2013 ARM's Cortex A15: Idle Power
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  • powerarmour - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    So yes, finally confirming what anyone with half a brain knows, competitive ARM SoC's use less power.
  • apinkel - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    I'm assuming you are kidding.

    Atom is roughly equivalent to (dual core) Krait in power draw but has better performance.

    The A15 is faster than either krait or the atom but it's power draw is too much to make it usable in a smartphone (which is I'm assuming why qualcomm had to redesign the A15 architecture for krait to make it fit into the smartphone power envelope).

    The battle I still want to see is quad core krait and atom.
  • ImSpartacus - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Let me make sure I have this straight. Did Qualcomm redesign A15 to create Krait?
  • djgandy - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    No. Qualcomm create their own designs from scratch. They have an Instruction Set licence for ARM but they are arm "clones"
  • apinkel - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Sorry, yeah, I could have worded that better.

    But in any case the comment now has me wondering if I'm off base in my understanding of how Qualcomm does what it does...

    I've been under the impression that Qualcomm took the ARM design and tweaked it for their needs (instead of just licensing the instruction set and the full chip design top to bottom). Yeah/Nay?
  • fabarati - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    Nay.

    They do what AMD does, they license the instruction set and create their own cpus that are compatible with the ARM ISA's (in Krait's case, the ARMv7). That's also what Apple did with their Swift cores.

    Nvidia tweaked the Cortex A9 in the Tegra 2, but it was still a Cortex A9. Ditto for Samsung, Hummingbird and the Cortex A8.
  • designerfx - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    do I need to remind you that the Tegra 3 has disabled cores on the RT? Using an actual android device with Tegra 3 would show better results.
  • madmilk - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    The disabled 5th core doesn't matter in loaded situations. During idle, screen power dominates, so it still doesn't really matter. About all you'll get is more standby time, and Atom seems to be doing fine there.
  • designerfx - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    The core allows a lot of different significant things - so in other words, it's extremely significant, including in high load situations as well.

    That has nothing to do with the Atom. You get more than standby time.
  • designerfx - Friday, January 4, 2013 - link

    also, during idle the screen is off, usually after whatever amount of time the settings are set for. Which is easily indicated in the idle measurements. What the heck are you even talking about?

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