![]() That’s a whopping 45% increase between the two chips.Ĭomparing the M2 to the M1 is a logical thing to do, but perhaps the more exciting duel is between the M2 chip and the latest Mac Pro, which still hasn’t been upgraded to Apple silicon. In the Metal benchmark, the M2 scored 30,627 points compared to the 21,001 of the M1. The two extra GPU cores on the M2 are definitely doing their job as well. ![]() These scores put the M2 just a fringe above what Apple teased. This adds up to an 11.5% improvement in single-core performance as well as a 19.5% boost in multi-core. Both mark an increase from the M1, which scored 1,707 and 7,419, respectively. In the Geekbench 5 test, the 13-inch MacBook Pro with the M2 chip scored 1,919 points in the single-core test and 8,928 in the multi-core test. The M2 also wins out by the number of GPU cores, bringing it up from eight to 10. However, the M2 has higher clock speeds, hitting 3.49GHz compared to the 3.2GHz provided by the M1. ![]() The M2 and the M1 both have eight cores, which amounts to four performance cores and four efficiency cores. These are still early days, and we only have the results of one benchmark, but so far, so good - the M2 managed to do a better job than what Apple itself had teased during its announcement. Apple itself has predicted a performance boost of around 18% when switching from the M1 to the M2. NS9xODnOdXĪlthough the 13-inch MacBook Pro is not even up for pre-order just yet, we already have the first benchmark results for the notebook, and thus, the first benchmarks of the M2 chip. Multi-core performance gain vs M1: 19.45%Ī little bit better than my estimates. Single-core performance gain vs M1: 11.56% CPU Benchmarks have leaked for Apple's M2 chip!
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