> Regardless of whether it's an intentional trick or an oversight, I don't think that the benchmark showing the mobile chip is better than a desktop chip in RAW PERFORMANCE is true. And that means that a lot of the conclusions that they draw from the benchmark aren't true. There is no way that the A14 (nor the M1) is going to be faster in any raw performance category than a latest generation and top-spec desktop system.
The benchmark is true but misleading. It compares 'Intel vs Apple Top Performance' meaning essentially the speed it could go at max. It is not a real world number or result and exists purely in a vacuum. If your phone ran at that speed for an extended period of time I guarantee it would melt. I think the only conclusion to be drawn is that Apple's mobile CPU's are very capable and well designed, and ARM has a lot of untapped potential.
The benchmark is true but misleading. It compares 'Intel vs Apple Top Performance' meaning essentially the speed it could go at max. It is not a real world number or result and exists purely in a vacuum. If your phone ran at that speed for an extended period of time I guarantee it would melt. I think the only conclusion to be drawn is that Apple's mobile CPU's are very capable and well designed, and ARM has a lot of untapped potential.