Apple Claims Its Next-Gen M2 SOC Is 90% Faster Than 10 Core Intel Alder Lake at Half The Power, Similar Performance As 12 Core Chip at Quarter The Power
It’s been only a few hours since Apple revealed its M2 SOC and several MacBook designs that make use of the new chip. To give a quick recap, the Apple M2 SOC is based on an optimized 5nm node & it is claimed to be a second-generation node, consisting of 20 Billion transistors. This is a 25 percent increase over the M1 SOC. The die size has also seen a small increase and while we have the same 8 core count as the last-generation M1, the cores themselves have been upgraded. That’s also a 25 percent increase over its predecessors. It is not clear if the cores are split evenly (4 P-Cores + 4 E-Cores) or if we are looking at a different config but based on the die shot, we can see four P-Cores. The new Apple M2 SOC makes use of brand new Performance and Efficiency cores with a larger cache, offering up to 18% faster multi-threaded performance versus M1. The SOC also gets 24 GB of LPDDR5 memory which acts as unified memory. This is a feature on the same package as the M2 SOC and consists of two 12 GB (128-bit wide) LPDDR5 DRAM chips for up to 50% higher bandwidth (100 GB/s). An upgraded Neural Engine offers 40% higher performance with its 16-core design and up to 15.8 trillion operations per second. The GPU on the Apple M2 SOC has also been upgraded by 10 cores, a 25 percent increase over the M1, and features a larger L2 cache which when combined with the higher bandwidth, offers up to 35% better performance. The GPU offers 111 GTexels/s & 55 GPixels per second throughput. Coming to the performance benchmarks, Apple claims that M2 offers an 18% boost in performance relative to the CPU versus M1 at the same power draw. Compared to an Intel Core i7-1265U on the Samsung GalaxyBook2 360 laptop which is a 10-Core Alder Lake-M chip, the company claims a 90% performance uplift at half the power and similar performance at a quarter the power. Apple does not stop there and goes ahead to compare a 12-Core Alder Lake-P chip, the Core i7-1260P on MSI’s Prestige 14Evo laptop. Apple says that the M2 SOC offers nearly similar performance (87% of Intel’s 12-Core Alder Lake) at a quarter the power. Nearly all of the performance measured for the Apple M2 SOC are within multi-threaded workloads so the company has yet to show us single-threaded or more importantly, the IPC gains for its next-gen SOC. Moving over to the GPU benchmarks, Apple claims that the M2 SOC offers a 35% performance boost over the M1. They once again used the same Intel 10-Core Alder Lake chip and used its integrated Iris Xe GPU for comparisons. The M2 offers a 2.3x increase in performance at 1/5th the power draw. Compared with the latest 10-core PC laptop chip, the CPU in M2 provides nearly twice the performance at the same power level. And, M2 delivers the peak performance of the PC chip while using just a quarter of the power.2 When compared to the latest 12-core PC laptop chip — which needs dramatically more power to deliver an increase in performance and is therefore found in thicker, hotter, more noisy systems with less battery life — M2 provides nearly 90 percent of the peak performance of the 12-core chip while using just one-fourth the power. Via Apple That’s a pretty good increase going from M1 to M2 but we should consider the fact that Apple’s own benchmarks aren’t that much indicative of real-world performance. We’ve seen their previous claims being shattered in independent tests so one should be cautious of believing these benchmarks and wait for actual tests from independent reviews to be available before you land a decision to get a new M2-powered Macbook. Compared with the integrated graphics of the latest PC laptop chip, the GPU in M2 delivers 2.3x faster performance at the same power level, and matches its peak performance using a fifth of the power. The higher performance per watt from M2 enables systems to have exceptional battery life, and run cool and quietly, even when playing graphics-intensive games or editing massive RAW images. Via Apple Apple M2 SOC Performance Tests Footnotes: