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Graphics department isn't an area where we've come to expect excellence from Mediatek SoCs, much less midrange ones. The Moto M refused to play nice with Basemark OS II 2.0, so no scores from that one. The same can be said about the results produced in Basemark OS II - a fine showing for the Moto M among P10 peers, but a superior S625 and markedly more powerful Helio X20 and Snapdragon 650. The higher-grade Snapdragon 650 with the fancier A72 cores and the Helio X20 are clearly in a different league. There's a pretty wide gap between the P10 and the S625, with the Qualcomm chip clearly having the edge. Shifting our gaze to Antutu for a quantitative measure of overall performance, and the Moto M isn't breaking any records, but it's still the highest ranked P10 device around. The latter, on the other hand, isn't squeezing the most of its deca-core CPU - looking at the Redmi Note 4, the Helio X20 can do much better. The Oppo R9s is not making a strong case for the S625, but the Zenfone 3 does redeem it, beating the Redmi Pro. The Moto M posts higher numbers here than the Meizu M3 Max, so it's shaping up to be one of the better P10 implementations already.
Moto g4 geekbench plus#
The Snapdragon 617 inside the Moto G4 Plus is showing further signs of aging and is struggling to keep up with the rest in multi-core as well. 1.95GHz) Cortex-A53 in a Snapdragon 625 configuration posts better numbers, but none is a match for the high-flying A72 cores that can be found in the Helio X20-powered Redmi Note 4 and Redmi Note Pro. In the single-core portion of GeekBench 4, the Moto M outperforms the Meizu M3 Max (Helio P10, too) and the Moto G4 Plus (Snapdragon 617). We won't be deviating from the usual drill - starting off with some CPU benchmarks.
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Sadly, we won't be able to test Mediatek's claim for 10% improved performance. We've reviewed a bunch of P10 devices already, so we have a lot to compare the Moto M against. We have the P10 version for review, in 3GB RAM spec - there's a 4GB option too, but not ours. There's a bump in the Mali-T860MP2 GPU frequency as well - 800MHz for the P15, 700MHz for the P10. The 8 Cortex-A53 cores in the P10 are capped at 1.95GHz, while the P15's CPU can go as high as 2.2GHz. There's little to set the two apart, though - it's all in the clock speeds.
Moto g4 geekbench full#
The handset could also sport a full metal design, as seen in a leaked image in December.The Moto M is powered by a Mediatek Helio P10 chipset, or if you're in India - the P15. Users will also be able to customize the handset using Motorola's Moto Maker, which allows consumers to choose different colors and materials to make the handset more personable. While the Moto X's display wasn't listed, it's safe to assume it will pack in a 2560 x 1440 Quad HD screen and should be available in 32 GB and 64 GB storage options at launch. These specs put the new Moto X on an even playing field with flagship rivals like the Samsung Galaxy S7, S7 Edge, LG G5, and HTC 10.
Moto g4 geekbench android#
The results show the smartphone is running Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow, powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor, Adreno 530 GPU (graphics processing unit), and 4 GB of RAM. The Moto X (2016)'s codename is "Sheridan" and is listed by its model number, "Motorola XT1650" on Geekbench. Lenovo recently unveiled a new smartphone, the Zuk Z2 Pro, and at the launch event the company's CEO, Yang Yuanqing, revealed that Motorola would be releasing a new and " exciting" device on June 9.Īt the time, it was believed that device would possibly be one of the leaked Moto G4 variants but June 9 could actually be the launch of the flagship Moto X since it just made an appearance on Geekbench.