The iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, which Apple presented on Tuesday (12), have already passed the first benchmark test, which reveals how powerful the new A17 Pro processor is. Geekbench results bring record scores.
As shown in the figure MySmartPrice this Thursday (14), the chipset manufactured using a 3 nm process was obtained iPhone 15 Pro scored 2,908 points in the single-core test and 7,238 points in the multi-core test. The results are significantly higher than those delivered by the iPhone 14 Pro with A16 Bionic, which recorded 2,642 and 6,739 points respectively.
This advantage over the previous generation The same situation is repeated on the iPhone 15 Pro Max. The newly launched smartphone scored 2,846 points and 7,024 points in single-core and multi-core tests respectively, while the iPhone 14 Pro Max scored 2,546 and 6,631 points.
The data shows that A17 Pro chip is 10% faster than A16 BionicThe six-core GPU of the new platform performed 20% better than the five-core GPU. Also according to the report; Both versions of iPhone 15 have 8 GB RAMconfirms the rumors.
Comparison with Galaxy S23 Ultra
In addition to its superior performance compared to the previous generation, iPhone 15 Pro also Outperforming one of its main competitors in benchmark tests Galaxy S23 UltraIt is currently the most powerful version of Samsung’s premium series.
The top-end smartphone, released at the beginning of the year, received 1,878 points in the single-core test and 4,973 points in the multi-core test.. The device from the South Korean manufacturer is equipped with an optimized version of Qualcomm’s currently most powerful processor – Snapdragon 8 Gen 2.
As for the new processor in the iPhone 15 Pro, Apple claims that it has 19 billion transistors with a 6-core CPU, two high-end performance cores, and a quad performance core CPU. With New Neural Engine Processes up to 35 trillion operations per second.
According to the Cupertino giant, the new GPU has increased speed and increased efficiency compared to its predecessor. there still is hardware accelerated ray tracingIt provides a big improvement compared to the software ray tracing line launched last year.
Source: Tec Mundo

I’m Ben Stock, a highly experienced and passionate journalist with a career in the news industry spanning more than 10 years. I specialize in writing content for websites, including researching and interviewing sources to produce engaging articles. My current role is as an author at Gadget Onus, where I mainly cover the mobile section.