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Which Mobile CPU Snapdragon or Exynos GPU gives good performance bechmark compared

kumaranil13k

Well-Known Member
Question: Which Mobile CPU Snapdragon or Exynos GPU gives good performance bechmark compared

I want to purchase new smartphone this festival season for video shooting video editing graphic designing animation and require high end performance speed GPU and cpu camera performance and editing speed.I compared many mobiles specifications with processors ram GPU camera resolutions and features I finalised following models of smartphones

MY FINDINGS ANALYSIS FOR YOUR REFRENCE

https://www.91mobiles.com/compare/S...ng/Galaxy+M51-34501/vs/POCO/X3+Pro-35680.html

1. Samsung galaxy f62-4g (6GB/128gb/1tb/ 64mp+12mp+5mp+5mp/ 32mp front camera/ 7000mah/ CPU Exynos 9825/ GPU Mali G76 Mp12/ dual 2.73+ dual 2.4+ quad 1.95/9000x7000 pixel image shoot/ 3840x2160 4k video shoot front and back camera) with separate micro sd card slot...


2. Samsung galaxy M51-4g (6GB/128gb/512gb/ 64mp+12mp+5mp+5mp/ 32mp front camera/ 7000mh/ CPU Snapdragon 730 / adreno 618/ dual 2.2+ hexa 1.8/9000x7000 pixel image shoot/ 3840x2160 4k video shoot front and back camera)


3. Samsung galaxy M62-5g to be launched (8GB/128gb/512gb/ 64mp+12mp+5mp+5mp/ 32mp front camera/ 7000mh/ CPU Exynos 9825 / Mali G76 MP12 / dual 2.7+ dual 2.4+quad 1.95/9000x7000 pixel image shoot/ 3840x2160 4k video shoot front and back camera)

4. Poco X3 pro
(6GB/128gb/1TB/
/ 48mp+8mp+2mp+2mp/ 20mp front camera/ 5160mh/ CPU Snapdragon 460 / Andreno 395 / single 2.9+ tri 2.4+quad 1.8/8000x6000 pixel image shoot/ 3840x2160 4k video shoot back camera/ and 1920x1080 video shoot front camera)


BENCHMARK COMPARISON TABLE


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Samsung galaxy f62 scores




samsung galaxy f62 AnTuTu benchmark

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samsung galaxy f62 geek bench
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samsung galaxy f62 graphics

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Samsung galaxy m51 scores


samsung galaxy m51 AnTuTu score

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samsung galaxy m51 geekbench
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samsung graphics graphics score

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POCO X3 PRO Scores


poco x3 pro AnTuTu score

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poco x3 pro geekbench score
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poco x3 pro gtx scores

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Courtesy above images from


https://www.91mobiles.com/compare/S...ng/Galaxy+M51-34501/vs/POCO/X3+Pro-35680.html

Brief pros cons from above benchmarks


1. Samsung galaxy f62
Pros: battery, camera, expandable sd card with 1TB with independent card slot

Cons: dark night shoot,refresh rate 60 hz, no 5g. Not qualcom Snapdragon cpu

2. Samsung galaxy M51
Pros: battery, camera, qualcom Snapdragon cpu and gpu

Cons: refresh rate 60 hz, no 5g,cpu speed less than f62, android 10, expandable micro sd to 512 gb

3. Samsung galaxy m62

Pros: battery, camera, expandable micro sd to 1tb,5g compatible, 8gb ram

Cons: yet to launch, refresh rate unknown, not qualcom snapdragon cpu gpu



4. Poco x3 pro

Pros: Snapdragon processor and GPU, with max frequency 2.9ghz single, refresh rate 120mhz, expandable 1tb micro sd.


Cons: back camera 48mp and front camer 20mp, less battery 5160mh, image shoot 8000*6000pixel, and front camera video shoot resolutin less


my questions

Before questions I had explained above my findings to easily clarify justify my questions to communicate and get better experts opinion advice and suggestions

On above benchmark as per cpu GPU performance poco x3 out performs samsung galaxy f62 and all models. But on battery standby time and camera resolution the samsung galaxy f62 is best bet.

1. Why samsung Exynos 9825 of samsung f62 outperformed in geekbench and AnTuTu scores of samsung galaxy m51 snapragon 730g CPU GPU and it's less performed the oppo pro Snapdragon 860 which will u say is good for long term less heating lagging and good for video editing graphic designing and gaming aa per graphic GPU and cpu performance

2. Which one of all is good for worth price in case of cpu camera GPU and overall performance and as per video editing requirements

3. Does poco x3 pro have adoptbale storage option as its android 10 will storage manager (SM) command work on it

4. Does any model have separate or dual micro sd card option or can the connect type c OTG hub and can we connect external usb SSD to it with multiple usb hub

If any concern or any configuration pointa to undertake I didn't saw while comparing I left or omitted to before purchase any opinion advice help suggestion will be welcomed.

Thanks a lot
 
my questions

Before questions I had explained above my findings to easily clarify justify my questions to communicate and get better experts opinion advice and suggestions

On above benchmark as per cpu GPU performance poco x3 out performs samsung galaxy f62 and all models. But on battery standby time and camera resolution the samsung galaxy f62 is best bet.

1. Why samsung Exynos 9825 of samsung f62 outperformed in geekbench and AnTuTu scores of samsung galaxy m51 snapragon 730g CPU GPU and it's less performed the oppo pro Snapdragon 860 which will u say is good for long term less heating lagging and good for video editing graphic designing and gaming aa per graphic GPU and cpu performance

2. Which one of all is good for worth price in case of cpu camera GPU and overall performance and as per video editing requirements

No real idea, I've never seen the devices you mention. And I've only ever done video editing on a Macbook using iMovie and Final Cut. I know about Galaxy Note20 Ultra 5G though, as I have one. :) But I will say that Exynos or Snapdragon in a Samsung phone, is decided by region and country. China, Japan, South Korea, and USA is Snapdragon, everywhere else is Exynos. The reason being CDMA carrier networks in those countries. Although that may change as the CDMA networks are been turned off. So what you get will depend on where in the world you are, otherwise you'll be buying a grey-import.

3. Does poco x3 pro have adoptbale storage option as its android 10 will storage manager (SM) command work on it

Poco is actually Xiaomi, So no it doesn't, not without rooting and suitable custom ROM(if available).

4. Does any model have separate or dual micro sd card option or can the connect type c OTG hub and can we connect external usb SSD to it with multiple usb hub

Provided the phone supports type-C OTG, then yes it should support external SSD storage. I've actually connected external 4TB USB hard-drives to phones via type-C OTG, and they've been recognised and worked.
 
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i am a big fan of Qualcomm so snapdragon gets my vote......no concrete evidence or experience as i have only used sammy's here in the U.S. and we only get the snapdragon processors.
 
@mikedt bro thanks for ur reply sharing ur precious time opinion suggestions advice and ur precious knowledge. Thanks a lot obliged for ur opinions and advice

No real idea, I've never seen the devices you mention. And I've only ever done video editing on a Macbook using iMovie and Final Cut. I know about Galaxy Note20 Ultra 5G though, as I have one. :) But I will say that Exynos or Snapdragon in a Samsung phone, is decided by region and country. China, Japan, South Korea, and USA is Snapdragon, everywhere else is Exynos. The reason being CDMA carrier networks in those countries. Although that may change as the CDMA networks are been turned off. So what you get will depend on where in the world you are, otherwise you'll be buying a grey-import.

@mikedt bro yes u r 100% right cpu and and config depends on country to country...I am in India...and while searching google phonearena I could find many phones is USA with same model and same processors. Yes band and CDMA volte is more in India and 5g band will. One soon dont know which band will be permitted in india in next year.

@mikedt bro my query was to know technically as per benchmark of cpu GPU whose cpu GPU strength is better for video graphics gaming in terms of speed performance or any loophole cons which I left after looking to configuration which should be kept in mind.

Provided the phone supports type-C OTG, then yes it should support external SSD storage. I've actually connected external 4TB USB hard-drives to phones via type-C OTG, and they've been recognised and worked.

@mikedt bro which type -C OTG hub u use which can give power to 4tb hdd to I want to purchase samsung evo pro 980 pcie gen 4 nvme which works in pcie4 3400mbps external sad casing ...how much read write speed technically OTG hub gives output and as usb 2.0 or 3.2 gen 2 (20gbps) compatible with phone. Which OTG hub u recommend for samsung galaxy m or f series phone...which can copy huge nandroid image or video edited huge 5gb-10gb-20gb files quickly means good speed

images
 
@ocnbrze bro thanks for ur reply sbaring ur precious time opinion advice suggestion opinions thanks a lot

i am a big fan of Qualcomm so snapdragon gets my vote......no concrete evidence or experience as i have only used sammy's here in the U.S. and we only get the snapdragon processors.

@ocnbrze bro if I m not wrong Snapdragon is qualcom processors ... I have seen on webiste same models with same processors sold available with is may be some alterations inside still my question is regarding benchmark advice to get experts technical opinion from the geekbench AnTuTu pcmark results tto get an idea from score regarding theri work performance and any suggestions opinions
 
@mikedt bro thanks for ur reply sharing ur precious time opinion suggestions advice and ur precious knowledge. Thanks a lot obliged for ur opinions and advice


bro yes u r 100% right cpu and and config depends on country to country...I am in India...and while searching google phonearena I could find many phones is USA with same model and same processors. Yes band and CDMA volte is more in India and 5g band will. One soon dont know which band will be permitted in india in next year.
bro my query was to know technically as per benchmark of cpu GPU whose cpu GPU strength is better for video graphics gaming in terms of speed performance or any loophole cons which I left after looking to configuration which should be kept in mind.

Well benchmark numbers makes my head spin, and so don't pay much attention to them, but bigger is better right?

I've read that some Snapdragon have a better graphic performance than their equivalent Exynos. As you're in India, that means if you want a Snapdragon Samsung, you'll have to import it from the US or China, etc. and good luck.

bro which type -C OTG hub u use which can give power to 4tb hdd to I want to purchase samsung evo pro 980 pcie gen 4 nvme which works in pcie4 3400mbps external sad casing ...how much read write speed technically OTG hub gives output and as usb 2.0 or 3.2 gen 2 (20gbps) compatible with phone. Which OTG hub u recommend for samsung galaxy m or f series phone...which can copy huge nandroid image or video edited huge 5gb-10gb-20gb files quickly means good speed

images

Can that particular hub be powered from an external source, or is it just drawing power from the host device. The speeds should be up to USB3.0 specs I guess.

I've plugged one 4TB into a Huawei Mate10 and Samsung Note20 Ultra, but I didn't do it for long, as it was just to transfer some movies and TV shows. For one thing battery drain can be excessive with powering and running a hard drive from a phone.
 
I admit I'm a sceptic when it comes to synthetic benchmarks, even more so when I don't know the provenance. For example the performance of some devices can be very fast for a couple of minutes and then fall off a cliff as thermal limitations kick in, so a single run may give a nice score but not represent reality. So if some source just quotes a benchmark result for a phone is that a first run with a cold device or how it performs after running the benchmark for 10 minutes? They are likely to be very different. Also there are manufacturers out there who have been caught programming their phones to behave differently when running benchmarking apps from how they work with other apps, and some of them persist in doing it (OnePlus for example, which would also make me cautious about Oppo, Vivo and Realme, since all 4 are sub-brands of BBK).

Plus there's the fundamental question of how well any of these things translate into real world usage (which varies between individuals). So I personally attach little if any weight to benchmark scores, and never look at them when making my choices, and hence, unfortunately, am not well placed to comment on their significance for your choice. Also I know that I don't need the fastest processor on the market for my use, so if I were looking at these things I'd be looking for power efficiency benchmarks rather than performance ones for my personal priorities (though I don't think the SoC will be the thing that decides my next phone purchase anyway: since I dislike large phones there will only be 2 or 3 models available in total that I'd consider!).

One thing I would note: you seem to be judging camera quality from specifications (comments like "better camera"). Unfortunately that doesn't work: the quality of the image processing software is more important than the sensor, and the number of pixels doesn't tell you anything about the quality of those pixels, or indeed of the lens in front of them, so the specifications don't tell you anything of real importance for assessing camera quality. For judging camera quality there is no substitute for comparing images taken in different lighting conditions, especially since this is subjective: some people like "vivid" images with "pop", others think this looks horrible and artificial, so one person's "great camera" might be another person's "deal breaker". If camera quality matters, track down reviews which include samples of the output and make your own decision of what's good enough for you (because it's your preference that matters, nobody else's).
 
use, so if I were looking at these things I'd be looking for power efficiency benchmarks rather than performance ones for my personal priorities (though I don't think the SoC will be the thing that decides my next phone purchase anyway: since I dislike large phones there will only be 2 or 3 models available in total that I'd consider!).
@Hadron bro thanx for ur reply, yes ur true that all companies benchmark may be tailored sponsored or for once go which can't predict...but Its can help a generic idea as we don't need 100% same result we can just before buying just rough idea if performance....as bro which power efficiency u will consider.... As pcmark benchmark test for battery life and charge time I have written in table...any website to get those values before purchase kindly help.

the quality of the image processing software is more important than the sensor, and the number of pixels doesn't tell you
@Hadron bro as u said the image processing software depends on camera or.omahe quality which image processing app in android mobile is best aa per ir thoughts...I know web or mobile cameraa are software interpolated their actual resolution is marketed ia 64mp or 48 mp is software interpolated technicall hardware resolution is totally different is there any software app or adb command or program tool through which we can increase the interpolation means we can get 64mp image resolution from 48 mp marketed camera...any app too or yaad code which can do...

@Hadron bro at last samsung mobile model I mentioned above f62 m31s m51 m52 all are ufs 2.1 and oppo x3 is ufs 3.1 does ufs type speed should be concerned for videos games or graphic editing as sequentional write speed is totally matters.. Hadron bro I want to get xiomi poco x3 pro but it's battery is 5000 mh with 33w charger and less camera 48mp camera ..but ufs 3.1 and more procesor speed and only 1000 bugs lesss with f62 but can't dinalize any piece advice bro
 
The camera's processing is what it is, unless you output raw and process it yourself (which some camera apps allow, some don't, but it's a much slower workflow so wouldn't be my first choice with a phone). But I'm not even thinking about quality of interpolation: handling of noise, tone, saturation, contrast, not over-sharpening, these things matter more for the image than simple pixel count. All phones use small sensors and are increasingly reliant on computational photography techniques, such as taking many underexposed pictures rapidly and combining them (stuff which you, as the user, never see going on). And spec sheets don't show any of this stuff. This is why I say that the way to judge a phone camera is to look at the pictures it takes and decide whether they are good enough (independent reviews or photos taken by users, not samples produced by the company themselves - more than one company has passed-off photos taken using professional cameras as phone samples).

But as a general point, you can never get 64MP images from a 48MP camera or whatever. Sure, there is upscaling software of increasing sophistication out there (the more sophisticated tools cost around $100 for a license, and require a real computer rather than a phone), but you can't create information this way, it's still just using a mixture of interpolation and using learned patterns to insert guesses at the detail that isn't recorded.

More seriously, don't assume that higher resolution = better camera. Most of these "64 MP" cameras produce 16MP output by default (pixel-binning, 4 pixels -> 1), while "48 MP" defaults to 12 MP. And while they generally have a mode that can output the full resolution, don't use it in anything other than bright light and don't assume that it will resolve as much extra detail as it sounds (I've looked at samples, such as in reviews on gsmarena.com, and often low-contrast detail, such as foliage, is smeared away by the noise you get with many small pixels, each of which is not collecting much light). And if the lens is not sharp it won't matter how high resolution the sensor is. So as I say, I judge phone cameras by the images they produce and not from specs.

(Also, as a final comment on phone specs, remember that a 64MP sensor only delivers 15% more resolution than a 48MP sensor, which is about the limit of what is perceivable when looking at an image of a reasonably large screen, and probably completely invisible when looking on a phone screen. This is because resolution improves as the square root of the number of pixels. And at this level differences in lens quality will matter far more than differences in pixel count).

I think I can't really advise on the last points because your usage is so different from mine. I hardly record video at all, so sequential write speed doesn't matter to me, and hence I have no reason to know whether these different things make a difference in reality - though UHS 2.1 is old technology, so presumably that's the manufacturer cutting costs. As for battery, I'd try to find reviews which test the actual battery life of the device rather than just look at the capacity: your table shows a longer battery life for the Poco despite a smaller battery, which can happen if the components are more efficient, but the question is how did they test the battery life (i.e. does their test reflect what you would use it for)? So maybe find some other reviews of these devices and see whether they agree about which device has the best battery life (e.g. GSMArena's reviews report a better battery life for the M51 than the X3 Pro, which makes sense for a larger battery and a more efficient processor). But also try to judge what you want in terms of battery life, and how that compares to other factors: unless you are like me, where one factor trumps all others to a huge extent, it will be a balance of factors, in which case "what is good enough?" is as important as "what is best?".
 
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