Realizzi che mi stai ripetendo quanto ho spiegato io?
Il SoC Samsung è la versione r i t a r d a t a.
Basta vedere come Anandtech sia riuscito a far meglio dei programmatori Samsung:
Improving The Exynos 9810 Galaxy S9: Part 1
Improving The Exynos 9810 Galaxy S9: Part 2
Se fossero giappo avrebbero fatto harakiri...
In the end the Exynos S9 was hampered on two fronts: one being just a very unoptimised BSP (Board support package; kernel, drivers, etc) by S.LSI (With the Mobile Division also possibly being a factor), particularly the seemingly senseless chasing of higher synthetic benchmarks scores such as GeekBench. which in turn backfired very badly in any real-world workloads. Qualcomm provided Samsung with an excellent baseline BSP on the S845 S9’s – so for S.LSI not being able to do the same is just unfortunate. The other front where the Exynos S9 was hampered was that the M3 just seems oversized and power hungry, and it can’t sufficiently act as the efficient workhorse for general workloads. Compounding problems, this comes at a cost of battery life. Here there’s just a lot more to be done to fix the efficiency and the performance discrepancy relative to Arm’s cores.