The Exynos 1480 SoC, which powers the mid-range smartphone Galaxy A55 5G (review), which was released earlier this month, has been officially introduced by Samsung.
Exynos 1480 SoC Brings Significant Improvements In Efficiency And Multi-Core Performance
According to Samsung Semiconductor, it outperforms the Exynos 1380 SoC by up to 18% in terms of speed and efficiency.
Unlike its 5nm predecessor, the latest processor is based on Samsung’s 4nm manufacturing process, which makes it 22 percent more power efficient. So Battery Life Will be Improved
Four Cortex-A78 performance cores, clocked at 2.75GHz (up from 2.4GHz on the Exynos 1380 SoC), and four Cortex-A55 efficiency cores, clocked at 2.0GHz, are included in the Exyxnos 1480 SoC. Performance improves as the maximum clock speed is increased. Samsung claims that the new processor performs 18% better in multi-core applications and launches apps around 13 percent faster.
Graphics Improvements of Exynos 1480
SoC features a new Xclipse 530 GPU, which is based on AMD’s RDNA technology. Although the GPU doesn’t support ray tracing like other flagship models, it supports higher resolutions and variable refresh rates. Samsung claims that the Xclipse 530 GPU is about 53 percent better than the Mali G68 MP5 GPU.
Other features include support for 4K video recording at 60 frames per second, a 200MP single camera, Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth v5.3, and a maximum refresh rate of 144Hz.
On the Antutu 10 benchmark, the Exynos 1480 SoC on the Galaxy A55 5G scores roughly 723K points, whereas the Exynos 1380 SoC scored roughly 594K points, according to nanoreview.net. This indicates a gain in the benchmark score of more than 20%. It is also noteworthy that Geekbench 6 results indicate improvements of 17% in single-core and 27% in multi-core scores. In terms of GPU (Compute Score), the more recent chipset has a 36 percent advantage.