Apple A4 Processor Teardown 79
Plocmstart writes "Here's what EETimes.com is claiming to be the first teardown of the A4 processor. 'Apple's iPad chip is a single-core ARM A8 made by Samsung. Through various benchmarking testing, UBM TechInsights was able to find out the details of the A4 processor.'"
Interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyone know what Google is planning on stuffing in their new tablet [gizmodo.com]?
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No reason for them to go with anything else than also one of the recent ARM SoC.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Advertisements.
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spyware !
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
Advertisements.
Slashdot broke my mod points somehow, but this deserves to be modded to plus infinity. However, as anyone who saw the iPhone OS 4.0 presentation knows, there will be plenty of ads on the iPad too soon enough.
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Funny)
8 minute abs (Score:3, Funny)
Well since apple came out with the 4 minute Abs, I assume google will have to go with the 3 minute abs. ie. the A3.
No Way (Score:5, Funny)
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As anyone who's dabble in electronics will tell you, opening or frying an IC lets the pixies escape.
Re:No Way (Score:5, Insightful)
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Ah, yes. I once accidentally reversed the 5 V and 12 V leads on a harddrive and saw the magical blue smoke escape from controller chip. Electronics work only so long as that smoke stays inside the chips! (I wonder how they get in it in there in the factories...)
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I wonder how they get in it in there in the factories...
Oh, it's the same way they get the coke in the coke bottles, the factory is actually filled with smoke.
also, multicore? (Score:3, Insightful)
also, I thought the world claimed it was multi-core? [tipb.com] This teardown summary says it's single core.
meanwhile, from the summary:
hmm.
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Find a review that says the UI slow.
Re:also, multicore? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Apple's just proving the point that consumers don't care how "fast" a chip is if the experience is that the device has an Apple Logo.
Re:also, multicore? (Score:5, Insightful)
Brand loyalty first has to be earned. Apple didn't get lucky, they created a lot of great products and earned their brand loyalty.
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Hi Bill. Are you stalking me again?
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Wait, I thought all "Apple fans" were mindless sheep who thought their Apple products were magical white shiny boxes powered by unicorn farts. Why would they know the difference between an ARM A8 and A9?
Or are you saying that Apple fans do actually have some discerning knowledge about the hardware they use?
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Sorry. Undoing a bad moderation.
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LDR r1, r0 ;
There you go, all better
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Does not assemble. Try this:
get_magic:
ADR r0, magic
BX lr
magic: .ascii "Magical\0"
No but it does have neon. (Score:4, Informative)
It does have Neon [arm.com] but no powerpc. Strange that this information did not came from someone with a compiler. Does apple withhold information what code can be generated? Are devs so spooked by the apps license?
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>>Does apple withhold information what code can be generated?
The only officially approved code generation method for the iPad is to send a nicely worded letter to Apple, along with X dollars. In Y months your app will be compiled for you and put up on the app store, for which you'll receive no royalties.
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I wish it were that easy! In the real world, developers go through all this and have to worry about their app being rejected.
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Neon, which...pretty much every ARM Cortex has, I believe.
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This can't be right... TFA doesn't make a single reference to magic.
It's a given. All electronic components operate via the Magic Smoke they contain. That's why it's such a big concern when see smoke rising from a device--once the Magic Smoke has leaked out, they stop working.
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I have a feeling a vast majority of people do think of computers and electricity as not necessarily the dictionary's definition of magic, but something very similar.
Indeed. The obligatory Arthur C. Clarke quote:
definitely applies. Even when you know something about the technology, it can still seem like magic.
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IMO, that's true of pretty much any "technology" these days.
Even something as "simple" as a car--ask your average person about how their car runs and they'll probably be able to tell you that the engine uses gasoline and that's pretty much it. You put the key in the ignition, turn it, and the magical transportation fairies start working.
A big part of this is due to specialization. Most folks have some particular thing that they're good at/focused on. But ask for details about how something works that's outs
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This can't be right... TFA doesn't make a single reference to magic.
I wish we had the original diagrams, maybe we could at least find the revolution generators..
(why parent post is funny [apple.com])
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Congratulations. (Score:5, Funny)
You found a way to make Slashdotters actually click through to the article. Now, if only you could find a way to make them read it.
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You found a way to make Slashdotters actually click through to the article. Now, if only you could find a way to make them read it.
Say it's a two girls one cup redirect instead?
Useful / single page URL (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=224701036&printable=true&printable=true [eetimes.com]
Next time guys, save us the effort and use the link that doesn't require us to click next 4 times to read an article that fits on half a page.
Oh ... timothy, nevermind.
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I was too busy giggling about "UBM" to notice. UBM? I do!
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Yup. Timmy is the new Zonk
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No, it's the Coke that comes with a free iPad Killer
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I played with a Ben NanoNote at FOSDEM and, while it's an amazing device, it's nothing like the iPad. The screen is really tiny - only 320x200 pixels, which is not enough even for most terminal apps (40x15 characters), let alone graphical apps. The keyboard is really tiny too and it has a very slow CPU and little RAM.
The strength of the NanoNote is that it really is tiny. It's smaller than a typical wallet - you could slip it into your trouser pockets and take it everywhere. Running a web browser on it
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Upshot: display tech dominates battery life (Score:5, Interesting)
They show that power usage is:
0.5 Watts at idle with the display disconnected
1.75 Watts at idle with display at min brightness
4.25 Watts at idle with display at max brightness
They estimate that the A4 CPU uses 0.5 to 0.8 Watts when browsing the web over WiFi.
Conclusion, FTA:
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Goof thing Pixel Qi is finally ramping up production to appreciable levels, with several upcoming products using their screen (also tablets)
Sure, they are "cheating" by turning the backlight down in bright ambient light situations...so? The effect is what counts.
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Considering its a cellphone CPU attached to a laptop screen: No shit!
teardown my ass (Score:3, Funny)
tfa:
IOW, "It looks kinda neat, wonder what's inside!"
L2 Cache! (Score:1, Insightful)
Did you see the size of the L2 cache? It ought to be enough for everybody!
Next steps (Score:3, Insightful)
A4 for iPad
A4 for next iPhone
A4 for next iPod touch
A4 for next AppleTV, possibly let it play games too.
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And then A5 maybe?!
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I'm waiting for the A5 Powerbook, it's gonna be awesome!
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A4 for President
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They can only run a single app at a time.. Only a single core. This explains everything.
Yes, before Intel's Core Duo CPUs, people on desktop computers could also only run one app at a time.
Oh? (Score:2)
Oh really? [ifixit.com]
Interesting in a left-handed sort of way (Score:2)
No mystery why the iPad is faster than iPhone 3GS (Score:2)
The question has been asked: how is the iPad so much faster than the iPhone 3GS [arstechnica.com], despite having the same processor (sometimes more than double the speed)? The simple answer is: double the memory bandwidth!
iPhone 3GS: 32-bit memory bus, 600 MHz core
iPad: 64-bit memory bus, 1000 MHz core.
And this is assuming the memory technologies / clock speeds did not change. If they also increased the memory clock, the bandwidth increase could be 3x or more. And since rich web media craves memory, bandwidth is a key li
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There's a huge flaw in that Arstechnica artical: they are using Safari to benchmark. Who's to say that Safari itself hasn't been optimised for the iPad? They should have tested using a custom benchmark app.