Ever Growing CPU Core Count of Mobile Chipsets

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growing CPU core count of mobile chipsets
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Peter 30 July 2017 Counterclockwise

Home computers went through a megahertz war and smartphone manufacturers did not learn
from that mistake. As early as January 2009 the pocket rockets crossed the 1GHz mark - the
Toshiba TG01 got there first. It had a single Scorpion core in its Snapdragon S1 chipset paired
with 256MB RAM. It seemed downright excessive at the time.

Even feature phones had climbing clock speeds, the Samsung Jet got up to 800MHz that same
year, later phones like the Nokia C3-01 (from 2010) got up to a full gigahertz.

TOP 10 BY DAILY INTEREST


Device Daily hits
1. Samsung Galaxy J7 Pro 69,734

2. Nokia 6 59,868

3. Samsung Galaxy S8 55,375

4. Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 54,719 Toshiba TG01 Samsung S8000 Jet Nokia C3-01 Touch and Type

5. Samsung Galaxy J7 Prime 48,575


As with Intel's NetBurst, physics got in the way of progress - high clock speeds use up too much
6. Xiaomi Redmi 4 (4X) 46,875
power. On the desktop side, that resulted in 100+ W TDP chips that needed leaf blowers to cool.
7. Xiaomi Mi 5X 46,790
On the mobile side, it just killed the battery.
8. Samsung Galaxy J7 Max 42,276

9. OnePlus 5 41,436 So makers chose another number to increase each year - the number of processor cores. LG
10. Samsung Galaxy J5 (2017) 37,858 produced the first dual-core phone in 2011, the LG Optimus 2X. This time it was Nvidia that
supplied the chip, a Tegra 2 AP20H with two Cortex-A9 cores.

TOP 10 BY FANS They were clocked at 1GHz again, even though the Motorola DROID 2 Global breached the 1GHz
Device Favorites barrier in late 2010 (with a single Cortex-A8 core).
1. Samsung Galaxy S7 edge 2,309
We'll ignore Instructions Per Clock (IPC) - if you're interested in real world performance, then
2. OnePlus 3 1,724
check out our mobile chipset guide. We're focusing on bragging rights here - who reached a
3. HTC 10 1,519 specific milestone first.
4. Samsung Galaxy S8 1,350

5. OnePlus 3T 1,017
It wouldn't be until late 2012 when phones clocked up to 2GHz - another Moto, the RAZR i XT890
(one of the early superminis). It was Intel, a veteran of the megahertz wars, that got there with a
6. Sony Xperia XZ Premium 977
single Atom core.
7. Xiaomi Mi Mix 928
8. Apple iPhone 7 Plus 812

9. LG V20 785
10. Samsung Galaxy S8+ 780

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LG Optimus 2X Motorola RAZR i XT890

As proof that increasing clock speed is an uphill battle, the fist quad-core phones came out
before the first 2GHz phone. The HTC One X (Tegra 3) and Samsung Galaxy S III (Exynos 4412)
came in May 2012.

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HTC One X Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III

We're yet to see the first 3GHz mobile, though with ever-improving manufacturing nodes, we're
getting close - the 20nm Helio X27 promises up to 2.6GHz, as does the 10nm Helio X30. We'll
revisit Helio in a moment, but first, on to the octa-core phones.

Samsung continued to pump up the specs and in March 2013, the Samsung Galaxy S4 came out
with eight CPU cores - four Cortex-A15 and four Cortex-A7. Yes, the age of big.LITTLE was upon
us.

Interestingly, the Snapdragon variant of the phone had only four cores - Krait 300s - but they were
clocked higher (1.9GHz vs. 1.6GHz) than the A15s, which made the performance fairly equal.

Samsung I9500 Galaxy S4 Samsung I9505 Galaxy S4

After a long gap came the next jump - in April 2016, the LeEco Le 2 Pro launched with the Helio
X25 (told you we'd come back). It had a 10-core (deca-core) processor - two big Cortex-A72
cores, plus two groups of four A53s.

The Helio X30 mentioned above swaps the second little cluster with even tinier Cortex-A35
cores. That makes the Helio X30 the only chipset so far to use three different kinds of cores (and
the only phone chipset to use the A35).

LeEco Le 2 Pro

Will we see a 12-core processor soon? Perhaps. The A53 (not to mention A35) core is tiny and
you can cram a lot of them on a 10nm or even a 14nm process. Not that it would make much
sense, but we're not sold on the idea that 10 or even 8TIPcores
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You see, Apple's in-house chipsets have very few cores. We said we won't talk about IPC, so let's
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just say that Apple's custom cores destroy
both Cortex and Kryo there. That's how it can get away
with so few cores.

Still, Apple went up from 2 to 3 cores for the iPad Air 2. Apple is the only chipset maker to use an
odd number of cores, by the way. We have other oddities like the 6-core (hexa-core) chips - an
Exynos 5260 in the Galaxy Note 3 Neo (February 2014) or the Snapdragon 808 in the LG G4
(April 2015).

Apple iPad Air 2 Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo LG G4

Recently, hexa-core designs became very popular in the mid-range. They offer a couple of big
cores for fast single-thread performance, plus four little cores for low-power operation and multi-
threaded boost. We think it offers a great balance of price, power and battery life and we'd love to
see more of those.

After years of dual and quad Core i-something processors, Ryzen rekindled AMD's rivalry with
Intel. It's now fairly easy for an enthusiast to grab an octa-core processor. Threadripper goes up
to 16 cores and the latest Core i9 has 18! In short, we don't expect mobile chip makers to curb
core counts and 6/8 cores will be standard for quite a while... unless you're Apple, of course.

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