Tag

Gpu Performance

All articles tagged with #gpu performance

M5 Max Delivers Roughly 15% Performance Edge for MacBook Pro 16
technology26 days ago

M5 Max Delivers Roughly 15% Performance Edge for MacBook Pro 16

Notebookcheck’s initial benchmarks show the MacBook Pro 16 with the M5 Max delivering a notable performance lead over the 14-inch model, with higher CPU and GPU scores and more stable results under sustained workloads. Fans run quieter at similar power, and the 16-inch model appears to throttle less than the 14-inch in continued use, though automatic vs. high-power modes affect per-run performance.

Samsung's Exynos 2600 with AMD RDNA 4 GPU Boosts Galaxy S26 Performance
technology3 months ago

Samsung's Exynos 2600 with AMD RDNA 4 GPU Boosts Galaxy S26 Performance

Samsung's Exynos 2600 chipset features a customized AMD RDNA 4 architecture called MGFX4, offering double the compute performance and improved ray tracing over its predecessor, with proprietary upscaling technology ENSS. Despite performance gains, it lags behind Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in benchmarks, and overheating solutions are being implemented ahead of its expected 2026 release in Galaxy S series phones.

Apple's M5 Devices: A New Era of Power and Performance
technology5 months ago

Apple's M5 Devices: A New Era of Power and Performance

The M5 MacBook Pro 14 (late 2025) offers significant GPU performance improvements over its predecessor, especially in AI and ray-traced graphics, but overall performance gains are narrow, and gaming performance remains limited. The device maintains excellent design, display quality, and battery life, but lacks major redesigns and has some drawbacks like a persistent notch and limited external display support. Upgrading is recommended mainly for those seeking a performance boost, with current models still being a solid choice.

technology9 months ago

Disabling Intel Graphics Security Mitigations Enhances GPU Performance by 20%

Disabling Intel graphics security mitigations can improve GPU compute performance by up to 20%, and Canonical, in collaboration with Intel, plans to disable these mitigations in Ubuntu packages to enhance performance, with the change expected to be included in Ubuntu 25.10. This move is based on the understanding that the security risks are minimal, as Intel and Canonical have approved the change, and Intel's own builds already disable these mitigations for better performance.