• New 3DMark coming soon, Includes DX9 through 11 and mobile device support (iOS/Android/Windows RT).
    9 replies, posted
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tKDujIBXO8E&feature=player_embedded[/media] [QUOTE] The new 3DMark, coming soon to Windows, Windows RT, Android and iOS The new 3DMark includes everything you need to benchmark your hardware. With three all new tests you can bench everything from smartphones and tablets, to notebooks and home PCs, to the latest high-end, multi-GPU gaming desktops. And it's not just for Windows. With 3DMark you can compare your scores with Android and iOS devices too. It's the most powerful and flexible 3DMark we've ever created. An all new version of the world's most popular benchmark. Includes three stunning tests for DirectX 9, DirectX 10 and DirectX 11 hardware. Designed for the full range of hardware from smartphones to high-end PCs. Compare your 3DMark scores with other Windows, Android and iOS devices. [/QUOTE] And to top it all off, as usual all the benchmarks will be avaliable for freeeee. Edit: the mobile and desktop tests are different benchmark scenarios entirely as well as dx10 and 11 being different too.
Gee I wonder on which platforms its going to be best optimised.
[QUOTE=Awesomecaek;38447805]Gee I wonder on which platforms its going to be best optimised.[/QUOTE] android ofc
What's the point of ios, there's nothing you can really do to change your scores Or are people just curious
[QUOTE=AJisAwesome15;38447843]What's the point of ios, there's nothing you can really do to change your scores Or are people just curious[/QUOTE] People use it to compare iOS devices
[QUOTE=AJisAwesome15;38447843]What's the point of ios, there's nothing you can really do to change your scores Or are people just curious[/QUOTE] I'm pretty sure you can overclock iOS devices. I know you can put the processor back to it's native value (as opposed to the underclocked value they ship with)
Why do they ship it underclocked anyways? Battery? Heat? Both?
[QUOTE=ChaosUnleash;38449189]I'm pretty sure you can overclock iOS devices. I know you can put the processor back to it's native value (as opposed to the underclocked value they ship with)[/QUOTE] It's not really about overclocking but more like confirming the true performance of a given device. It also makes other devices comparable to each other via the scoring system and not just going blindly by what the manufacturer claims of their performance.
[QUOTE=Cjmax;38449542]Why do they ship it underclocked anyways? Battery? Heat? Both?[/QUOTE] Given how hot some phones get, I doubt they care much about heat. I think it's all about the battery life.
B-b-b-but, what about Blackberry? D:
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