MediaTek Dimensity 9000 ????The Best From Mediatek.
The Dimensity 9000 brings with it a lot of firsts including it being the first SoC to be fabbed on the TSMC 4 nm process and sporting the first ARM v9 CPUs including a Cortex-X2 core at 3.05 GHz, 3x Cortex-A710 cores at 2.85 GHz, and 4x Cortex-A510 cores at 1.8 GHz. These ARM v9 CPUs will be paired with LPDDR5x RAM that runs at 7,500 Mbps but 6,400 Mbps chips will be supported as well. The Cortex-X2 running at 3.05 GHz is clocked higher than the X1 Core of the Snapdragon 888 and Exynos 2100 and features 1 MB of L2 cache. In single-core benchmarks, MediaTek claims up to a 35% system-level performance bump and up to a 10% improvement in core-level performance over the current "Android flagship", which, for all intents and purposes, can be considered to be the Snapdragon 888. The three Cortex-A710 middle cores are also quite powerful with 512 KB L2 caches and up to a 2.85 GHz clock similar to the Cortex-A78 middle cores at 2.8 GHz found in the Exynos 2100. The four little Cortex-A510s also employ a redesigned pipeline and each core gets its own 256 KB L2 cache. A combined DynamIQ Shared Unit L3 cache of 8 MB is used at the cluster level. While it remains to be ascertained in independent testing, the Dimensity 9000 has the potential to outperform any Android flagship SoC now and in the immediate future, such as the upcoming Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, while also being on par with the Apple A15 Bionic, at least in terms of multi-core performance. Watch the video till end to know more about this landmark chipset.
The Dimensity 9000 brings with it a lot of firsts including it being the first SoC to be fabbed on the TSMC 4 nm process and sporting the first ARM v9 CPUs including a Cortex-X2 core at 3.05 GHz, 3x Cortex-A710 cores at 2.85 GHz, and 4x Cortex-A510 cores at 1.8 GHz. These ARM v9 CPUs will be paired with LPDDR5x RAM that runs at 7,500 Mbps but 6,400 Mbps chips will be supported as well. The Cortex-X2 running at 3.05 GHz is clocked higher than the X1 Core of the Snapdragon 888 and Exynos 2100 and features 1 MB of L2 cache. In single-core benchmarks, MediaTek claims up to a 35% system-level performance bump and up to a 10% improvement in core-level performance over the current "Android flagship", which, for all intents and purposes, can be considered to be the Snapdragon 888. The three Cortex-A710 middle cores are also quite powerful with 512 KB L2 caches and up to a 2.85 GHz clock similar to the Cortex-A78 middle cores at 2.8 GHz found in the Exynos 2100. The four little Cortex-A510s also employ a redesigned pipeline and each core gets its own 256 KB L2 cache. A combined DynamIQ Shared Unit L3 cache of 8 MB is used at the cluster level. While it remains to be ascertained in independent testing, the Dimensity 9000 has the potential to outperform any Android flagship SoC now and in the immediate future, such as the upcoming Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, while also being on par with the Apple A15 Bionic, at least in terms of multi-core performance. Watch the video till end to know more about this landmark chipset.