Benchmarks: Whatever Is Available

As we’ve had very little time with the Mac mini, and the fact that this not only is a macOS system, but a new Arm64-based macOS system, our usual benchmark choices that we tend to use aren’t really available to us. We’ve made due with a assortment of available tests at the time of the launch to give us a rough idea of the performance:

CineBench R23 Single Thread

One particular benchmark that sees the first light of day on macOS as well as Apple Silicon is Cinebench. In this first-time view of the popular Cinema4D based benchmark, we see the Apple M1 toe-to-toe with the best-performing x86 CPUs on the market, vastly outperforming past Apple iterations of Intel silicon. The M1 here loses out to Zen3 and Tiger Lake CPUs, which still seem to have an advantage, although we’re not sure of the microarchitectural characteristics of the new benchmark.

What’s notable is the performance of the Rosetta2 run of the benchmark when in x86 mode, which is not only able to keep up with past Mac iterations but still also beat them.

CineBench R23 Multi-Threaded

In the multi-threaded R23 runs, the M1 absolutely dominates past Macs with similar low-power CPUs. Just as of note, we’re trying to gather more data on other systems as we have access to them, and expand the graph in further updates of the article past publishing.

Speedometer 2.0

In browser-benchmarks we’ve known Apple’s CPUs to very much dominate across the landscape, but there were doubts as to whether this was due to the CPUs themselves in the iPhone or rather just the browsers and browser engines. Now running on macOS and desktop Safari, being able to compare data to other Intel Mac systems, we can come to the conclusion that the performance advantage is due to Apple’s CPU designs.

Web-browsing performance seems to be an extremely high priority for Apple’s CPU, and this makes sense as it’s the killer workload for mobile SoCs and the workload that one uses the most in everyday life.

Geekbench 5 Single Thread

In Geekbench 5, the M1 does again extremely well as it actually takes the lead in our performance figures. Even when running in x86 compatibility mode, the M1 is able to match the top single-threaded performance of last generation’s high-end CPUs, and vastly exceed that of past iterations of the Mac mini and past Macbooks.

Geekbench 5 Multi-Thread

Multi-threaded performance is a matter of core-count and power efficiency of a design. The M1 here demolishes a 2017 15-inch Macbook Pro with an Intel i7-7820HQ with 4 cores and 8 threads, posting over double the score. We’ll be adding more data-points as we collect them.

Apple Silicon M1: Recap, Power Consumption M1 GPU Performance: Integrated King, Discrete Rival
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  • KoolAidMan1 - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    Performance per watt is significantly higher than Intel's current offerings. It outperforms i7 and i9 in certain tasks, let alone other laptop chips
  • Kishoreshack - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    The only thing these macs are better at is internet browsing & watching videos
    I would happily do that on my tab also don't see the point of using mac for serious productivity stuff
  • Silver5urfer - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    Unfortunately the market is shifting towards that disaster, this Mac will be sending some wave in marketing bs for people who want a thin and light use and throw machine for such work. But thanks to Ryzen we have more DIY market incoming and more GPUs due to Next Gen arrival and more compute intense work like Streaming and etc.
  • melgross - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    That’s just your opinion.
  • misan - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    They are also better at compiling code, editing photos and videos and *shock* gaming than comparable computers ;)
  • BushLin - Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - link

    What games? iPhone games?
  • misan - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    All kinds of games. Larian has shown a native Baldur's Gates 3 version running smoothly at 1080p with highest settings. Not to shabby for a chip that runs at 15-20 watts.
  • BushLin - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    I'm sure it'll be good for playing Myst
  • Spunjji - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    ROTTR performance beats any other integrated graphics out there, even under emulation.

    Facts must hurt you?
  • BushLin - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    GPU performance on the M1 is its best quality, don't see any contradiction of that from me.
    Jokes about the platform limiting game availability hurt you?

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