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Guess it is a good time to upgrade my 12.9 iPad Pro then. The last couple of years, there was very little progress in terms of performance.

I hope the display problems and bending issues has all been ironed out with this new model also.
 
Damn, sick looking numbers. This thing will be "future proofed" like crazy. Im going to keep that baby for 5 years minimum.
 
Not to be a killjoy, but I don’t understand why people get so excited about benchmarks. It feels like the chips in high end devices have been overkill for most people’s use for a long time now. It seems like people are just excited to see big numbers even if it makes no practical difference to them.
 
We might see it next week... in a MacBook!

The multi-core score is impressive. I also notice it supports 32GB of ram, which fits in with it being used in a MacBook. The A14 is shown as supporting a maximum of 16GB.
Indeed. Wonder if it’s going in the MacBook Air or Pro.

It could even be an 2021 iPad Pro alternative.
 
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Not to be a killjoy, but I don’t understand why people get so excited about benchmarks. It feels like the chips in high end devices have been overkill for most people’s use for a long time now. It seems like people are just excited to see big numbers even if it makes no practical difference to them.
That’s what I keep saying. For most people who utilize an iPad for content consumption, the chip I currently have in my 2017 IPP is STILL overkill. The battery will give in long before the chip becomes too slow - or Apple will stop updating this device b/c it’s just too old or RAM limited. The chip however, would likely chug along just fine.
 
That’s what I keep saying. For most people who utilize an iPad for content consumption, the chip I currently have in my 2017 IPP is STILL overkill. The battery will give in long before the chip becomes too slow - or Apple will stop updating this device b/c it’s just too old or RAM limited. The chip however, would likely chug along just fine.

The high multicore score of the A14X is important for actual creative professionals though in tasks like 4k video production/rendering and also batch image editing and compiling code. These kind of tasks will process much quicker with high multicore scores.
 
The high multicore score of the A14X is important for actual creative professionals though in tasks like 4k video production/rendering and also batch image editing and compiling code. These kind of tasks will process much quicker with high multicore scores.
Right, there are users out there that will certainly benefit. My point was, for the vast majority who simply consume content - the gains will not be realized in a meaningful way.
 
Not to be a killjoy, but I don’t understand why people get so excited about benchmarks. It feels like the chips in high end devices have been overkill for most people’s use for a long time now. It seems like people are just excited to see big numbers even if it makes no practical difference to them.
Well, for people like me that hang on to their computers for a long time, that is very helpful. It means the computer maintains its usefulness longer and doesn’t start to feel like it’s slowing down as much with future updates. I regularly keep my computers for over 5 years.
 
Well, for people like me that hang on to their computers for a long time, that is very helpful. It means the computer maintains its usefulness longer and doesn’t start to feel like it’s slowing down as much with future updates. I regularly keep my computers for over 5 years.
I get that, and so do I. But we reached the point that any good computer is powerful enough to last over 5 years if you want it to some time ago. "Future proofing" isn't what it used to be.
 
Wow, 32 gigs of Ram basically means this thing is going into a Mac for sure... but look at that 8 gigs of VRAM too! I’m not saying they’re doing this but it would be so cool to see a 13 inch laptop from Apple with that much VRAM.
One other thing, there are only 7 GPU cores (execution units). So maybe there will be a binned A14Z later with 8?
 
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Not to be a killjoy, but I don’t understand why people get so excited about benchmarks. It feels like the chips in high end devices have been overkill for most people’s use for a long time now. It seems like people are just excited to see big numbers even if it makes no practical difference to them.
I dont see the problem

Best Case Scenario:
Apple finally stops treating the iPad as “a 3rd party app player on a modified phone OS” and actually starts utilizing these specs by giving us Apple Pro apps that benefit off this power.

Worst Case Scenario:
Apple continues to ignore the iPad and MacBooks become cheaper, faster, quieter, more battery efficient machines that run first party Apple programs.


Ideally, I would like to see the iPad Pro evolve into being a Pro iPad so that I never have to buy a MacBook again. But if not then at least 2021 MacBooks will be a good “iPad alternative”.
 
Not to be a killjoy, but I don’t understand why people get so excited about benchmarks. It feels like the chips in high end devices have been overkill for most people’s use for a long time now. It seems like people are just excited to see big numbers even if it makes no practical difference to them.
Yeah I think for me the value I get out of the benchmarks is just having a general sense of when progress is being made in performance and efficiency but at the end of the day it doesn't necessarily factor into my purchase decisions. There are some that revel in the leadership in benchmark results of a particular platform for example and I can't relate to that as well as they can. Apple can make the greatest rig in the world but if it can't natively do something that can be done on another platform then those great performance specs won't factor strongly into a purchasing decision if one needs that particular software. Likewise if I want to run FinalCut I'm not going to consider doing it via VM on a Windows rig, and I'm not sure I want to go through the hassle of building a hackintosh.

All of that said I'm excited about the Apple silicon movement. Really looking forward to picking up a MacMini at some point to use as a FCP rig at home. I don't do enough video editing to need anything more powerful, but its nice to know that things will only get better and better.
 
I get that, and so do I. But we reached the point that any good computer is powerful enough to last over 5 years if you want it to some time ago. "Future proofing" isn't what it used to be.
True but I think with iPads the amount of RAM is the joker here not the CPU, it always was the RAM for iPads, I've had problems with that on two iPads now. Especially as Apple tries to get bigger productivity applications (Apple and 3rd party) onto the iPad over the coming years. I've upgraded the RAM on many a PC, not so on my iPads.
 
8 GB RAM may just apply to the Macs, as it says for GPU. I also note it lists support for 3 displays, which I don't see happening for the iPad Pro.

And that Geekbench score!

If real, my Core m3-7Y32 MacBook 12 will suddenly be feeling very inadequate.
 
8 GB RAM may just apply to the Macs, as it says for GPU
As the RAM is shared between CPU and GPU, this is likely the maximum amount of the shared memory that the GPU can allocate. For lower bit depths, it would need less, for example.
 
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