![]() ![]() Samsung advertises its Work/Life balance Galaxy line to those searching for Blackberry10 info ().HTC turns to the press to talk smack about Samsung and the Galaxy S IV ().Following Samsung Galaxy S4 launch, Apple debuts ‘Why iPhone’ webpage to tout why people love iPhone, slam Android (). ![]() Samsung announces Galaxy S IV, 5″ inch display, April release ().BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins says iPhone is old news ().The scary news is that the non-LTE version of this phone uses an Octocore Samsung Exynos chip with Imagination GPU that is likely to be even faster, putting it further out in the field against the competitor’s devices.Īs always, these speed tests are subjective and there are likely to be faster phones released every month or so. The Quad-core 1.9GHz Qualcomm SnapDragon 600 + 2GB of RAM seems to wipe the floor with the competition. No harm, really, but it does make it look bad in the charts.Primate Labs, the company behind the Geekbench speed-ranking system, has compared the Galaxy S4 with all the flagship phones from various vendors including LG, HTC, Blackberry, and Apple. The V30 is packing top quality hardware, it's just the tuning that's a notch below the competition. It's quite easy to sum up the LG V30 benchmark performance - flagship-grade, minus 5-10 percent. The Pro, as well as other FullHD phones are, predictably, in the lead. ![]() The Exynos versions are typically ahead and so is the Kirin-equipped Mate 10 non-Pro. The onscreen GFXBench results of the V30 are the odd frame per second short of the competition, though the LG phone still inches ahead of the Galaxy S8+ in Snapdragon trim. Exynos and Kirin rule here though, represented by the Note8, S8+ and a couple of Mates. In Basemark ES 3.1 the V30 shows more brawn and punches as strong as the other S835 contenders. The Exynos version of the Samsung phone is in the lead, but S835 devices are a step ahead of LG's offering too. Basemark X places the V30 second to last with only the S835 Galaxy S8+ behind it. In the graphics department, the V30's scores are a little below average. The HTC U11+ occupies the top spot with the OnePlus 5T a close second. Here the LG handset is in the upper half of the chart, on par with the Note8 and the Mate 10. Basemark OS 2.0Īntutu paints a different picture of the V30, a more favorable one. It is still ahead of the V20 and G6, so that's something. Here, the V30 places dead last among this season's favorites. The less than impressive showing continues into Basemark OS II 2.0, which can be used as a gauge for overall performance. The rest of the flagships are ahead of the V30, with the Note8 and Mate 10 Pro leading the pack. In the multi-core test the V30 is in the lower half of the chart, only managing to top the S835 version of the Galaxy S8+ and the Xiaomi Mi Mix 2. ![]() There's a slight improvement here when compared to the G6's Snapdragon 821 chip. The single-core result is about average for the current crop of flagship - a few score higher, a few are below the V30 in the chart. We start off with benchmarking CPU performance in GeekBench. On the pre-production unit we were only able to run some of the usual benchmarks - LG had restricted internet access to benchmarking apps, and a lot of them don't want to start when offline. There are 4GB of RAM on board and that's the only option available - even the tricked out V30+ version that packs 128GB of storage 'only' has 4 gigs of RAM. The LG V30 is powered by the Snapdragon 835 chipset - the proper current flagship SoC unlike the G6 which makes do with last year's 821. We finally got our hands on a retail unit and we used it to re-run all of our tests - we've updated the relevant review sections, benchmarks among them. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |