The rumor mill followed Samsung's choice of chipset for the Galaxy S6 duo in great detail. Leaked benchmarks show that going with its in-house Exynos 7420 chipset was a solid decision. The chipset is built on the company's 14nm process and includes four Cortex-A53 and four Cortex-A57 cores. The Galaxy S6 scored impressive results in AnTuTu, now the Galaxy S6 Edge has visited Geekbench. Both flagships use the Exynos 7420 and if these scores are correct, they will run laps around Snapdragon 810-based devices. Qualcomm's intermediate top dog has the same processor setup, 4x A53 plus 4x A57, but is made on a 20nm process. It's really there to tide things over until Qualcomm's in-house CPU designs (dubbed Taipan) are ready. Here's how the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge would stack up against some old and current competition. The LG G Flex 2 score is from when we first met the device at CES, so that was on pre-release software. .jrGraphContainer { background: none !important; border-bottom: 1px solid #eee !important;} ul.jrGraph { left: 86px !important; } ul.jrGraphControls { padding: 0; margin-left: -10px !important; } JRGRAPH_EXPANDABLE_VERSION = false; GeekBench 3 Higher is better Galaxy S6 Edge (Lollipop) 5375 LG G Flex 2 (Lollipop) 3929 HTC Nexus 9 (Lollipop) 3470 Galaxy Note 4 (Lollipop) 3394 Meizu MX4 Pro 3386 Motorola Nexus 6 3285 Samsung Galaxy S5 3011 HTC One (M8) (Lollipop) 2923 Sony Xperia Z3 2860 LG G3 (Lollipop) 2370 Of course, until we're holding a Galaxy S6 Edge in our hands we can't verify that the score is real. That day is fast approaching, the Galaxy S6 duo will be unveiled in early March. Source |...
Source: http://www.gsmarena.com/samsung_galaxy_s6_edge_tops_geekbench_results-news-11239.php