Apple Paul M1 benchmark and how they translate into real-world use


A wave of Apple Paul M1 benchmarks has landed today with reviews of the new MX as well as computers that now reach early customers. We now have some great examples of what impressive new M1 Mac capabilities mean for real-world performance.

Last week saw the first Apple Pull M1 benchmark land with the new MacBook Air that outperformed the 16-inch MBBook Pro with both single and multi-core scores. Then yesterday we saw that the entire M Paul M1 Mac lineup beats every Intel Mac in single-core scores and some wild results for Cinebench.

With the M1MX before launching reviews today and getting into the hands of customers, we got a lot of recognition of those impressive initial results from each of the available benchmarks but besides, some powerful examples of how powerful Pulse Silicon Chips differ. Real-workflows.

How Apple translates the M1 benchmark into real world performance

Developer Paul Hudson shared this example of his M1MBBook Pro with 16GB RAM rip by Excode Unzip in just 5 minutes, meanwhile his 8-core Intel i9 16 inch MacBook Pro 64GB RAM will take more than 13 minutes.

He notes that it is one year old, 6,000,000 m Is armed $ 2,000m1m B by Kabuk Pro.

TechCrunch’s Matthew Panzarino found the same 5-minute speed to unzip the Xcode Beta (on all three M1MOXs), though 7 minutes faster for the 16-inch Intel MBQbook Pro than what Hudson saw.

Another neat real-world example of M1M Power is the GIF shown below that shows the machine opening all the applications in the instant dock without any applications. Panzarino highlights “It’s hard to get a trip to launch anything and the fan almost never moves.”

While it seems that most accounts show less battery life in less than 15+ hours compared to the claims for its new MBQbook Air and Pro, they note more improved power efficiency and battery life on Intel MBKbooks.

Here’s a look at the Apple Pul M1 benchmark for compiling WebKit, it uses only a fraction of the battery life, making it faster than the Intel MBKbook, as it uses 9% battery compared to 39 or 76%! (Review of Panzarino):

Regarding the performance, the M1 Mac Mini also beat the 2019 Mac Pro here.

Another interesting observation of Panzarino is that “whenever the swap appeared, he did not pay attention at all.” He thinks you need more than 16GB RAM on this M1 Mac to ask your Mac a lot.

Finally, an example of real-world gaming playing the shadow of The Virgin’s Dieter Bohan the Comb Rider on the M1MB Kabuk Air. The raw performance isn’t huge, but the point is that it’s relatively speaking for a relatively base notebook, a fanless machine with a unified GPU to run the game at 38 fps, and it’s by Rosetta 2 translation – not the original!

Bohne also mentioned in his review that the M1MB Kabuk Air “has exceeded almost every expectation.”

As we noted at the time, the new M1 Mac Macbooks unfortunately have 720p webcams. Apple Paul says they’ve improved with a new image signal processor for a better picture, but Bohan and others say it’s still “awesome.”

But overall, the new M1 Mac looks phenomenal. Seeing Paul M1 Benchmarks and the real-world performance we’re seeing What impressed you the most? Let us know in the comments below!

FTC: We use revenue generating auto to affiliate links. More


Check out 9to5Mac on YouTube for more Apple News: