towforce wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 12:32 pm
Ckappe wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 1:11 am
Ckappe wrote: ↑Sun Feb 28, 2021 12:39 am
towforce wrote: ↑Sat Feb 27, 2021 11:56 pm
I haven't read the whole thread - is there a conclusion? Does a light laptop with an Apple M1 SOC get roughly the same amount of analysis on one charge as a laptop with a heavy battery and big power-hungry CPU? Or is it just too difficult to compare?
Edit: the post that appeared while I was writing this (see above) seems to indicate that in this particular game, a power-hungry AMD CPU with a heavy battery would be the winner.
Conclusion is that the higher-end laptop with bigger battery wins hands down. running the same SF13 code it does approx 2x nodes analyzed before battery runs out..and due to the bigger battery stamina is only about 30% less at full throttle, despite much faster Ryzen 9 CPU

)
And due to M1s relatively weak GPU analyzing with GPU engines like LC0, Ceres, Allie etc. the difference becomes abysmal for those use-cases..
Thanks. This makes sense: the M1 SOC is, IMO, an absolutely STUNNING piece of technology, even by today's standards, and Apple deserve kudos for creating it. However, it's not really surprising that a low powered lightweight laptop created from it is not optimised for this particular comparison, and it's also not surprising that it can't win it.
Apologies if this is actually already happening, but I hope the manufacturers of computers that use other operating systems (especially Windows and Chrome OS) take note and start using SOCs in place of CPUs (though obviously they can't buy an SOC as good as the Apple M1 right now).
I have nothing against M1 as such if it was open and not tied to Apple's locked proprietary DRM-control, locked bios, AIO "appliances". it would be a more valid option. This said the 39W TDP and performance/power ratios do not appear to be significantly ahead of other more low-powered mobile 5nm ARMs like Snapdragon, Kirin, Exynos, etc. in the perf/power ratio aspect (not even that much ahead of AMD's 7nm CPU it seems in real-life testing), hence their massive marketing bandwagon pushes out endless of comparisons against only older-gen Intel x86 CPUs, online.
The main problem with M1 today is the performance/price ratio, external I/O, and the lack of GPU/AI processing matching the price-tag if I see this from a chess-perspective.
I also think more laptop/phone/tablet makers of both ARM CPUs and x86-CPUs will follow suit and include on-chip RAM. I would also assume Apple as well as others will need much more than the limiting 16GB on-chip as long as external/extended RAM is not accessible from CPU.
I am not that fond of combining too much on the SOCs, I think RAM and GPU make sense but not really at the expense of the ability to access RAM and GPU externally as well. I am even more against soldering wear-and-tear parts like SSDs etc to motherboards in laptops. In essence, this leads to throw-away products with an OS-controlled planned obsolesce scheme that I am not too fond of. And when people report that the OS overuses the soldered SSDs the lifespan of these "netbooks" looks questionable, indeed.