Latest version of Geekbench adds new tests, scoring, iOS interface

Posted:
in Mac Software edited January 2014
Primate Labs this week rolled out the latest version of its Geekbench system benchmarking software, adding a number of new tests, scoring systems, and more.



Geekbench 3 was announced on Friday in a post on Primate Labs' blog, and it is first major upgrade to Geekbench in six years. The benchmarking program is available for Windows, OS X, and Linux from Geekbench's website. Android and iOS versions are available in the Google Play Store and in the iTunes App Store.

Among Geekbench 3's new features are an array of new benchmark tests. These, Primate Labs says, are aimed at modeling real-world processor-intensive tasks. The tests cover different application domains, including encryption, image processing, signal processing, and physics simulations.

Primate Labs has also rewritten 12 benchmark tests from Geekbench 2, making them better able to represent real-world applications and typical usage.

The new version also reworks its scoring system. Now, single-core performance and multi-core performance are broken out into two separate categories. Primate Labs did so because, while more apps are beginning to use multi-core processes, single-core is still very important since every application uses it. Due to the change, Geekbench 3 scores are not comparable to Geekbench 2 scores.

The update also brings a new interface for iOS, one that is tailored to the "flat" design aesthetic introduced by Jony Ive's team with iOS 7. In addition to the new look, Geekbench 3 now automatically archives each benchmark run, and the app integrates with Dropbox for easy results sharing between devices. Geekbench also now uses JSON as its native file format across versions.

The iOS version of Geekbench is available for $1 in the App Store. The 12.5-megabyte download requires an iPhone, iPad, or iPod running iOS 6.0 or later.

Pricing for Geekbench 3 for non-mobile platforms ranges from $15 for a single-user Linux license to $200 for a single-user professional license for Geekbench 3 Pro. Customers buying a Geekbench license before August 31 can receive $5 off a single-platform license, $10 off a cross-platform license, or $50 off a professional cross-platform license. Those options are available on Primate Labs' site.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member
    Does this mean that there is now finally a useful metric for comparing Android and iOS devices to one another? Anyone with experience care to comment?
  • Reply 3 of 10
    herbapouherbapou Posts: 2,228member


    I am seeing chatter about an Apple TV set launch in november.  trying to confirm..

  • Reply 4 of 10

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post



    Does this mean that there is now finally a useful metric for comparing Android and iOS devices to one another? Anyone with experience care to comment?


     


    Doubt it. Geekbench is like putting your cars engine on a dyno to measure the horsepower.


     


    If Car A has 300HP and Car B has 600HP, is Car B faster? You can't say unless you know how much each car weighs. If Car B is twice as heavy then they will accelerate about the same.


     


    The GS4 CPU benchmarks about 2X as fast as the A6 in the iPhone 5. Yet in real-world benchmark tests (like Safari) the iPhone 5 is just as fast.


     


    To be blunt, Android is twice as heavy as iOS and therefore requires more horsepower to go just as fast.

  • Reply 5 of 10
    poochpooch Posts: 768member
    yeesh. downloaded the geekbench 3 demo just to have a look and then ran it. without even asking (or telling me later) they uploaded the results to their server. there was nothing to indicate that would happen. i didn't have to bypass anything, or opt-in, or agree or disagree with anything. so i wonder what else from my machine they uploaded to their server without my permission. yet another company caring about your privacy.
  • Reply 6 of 10
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    If it's not sold on the Mac App Store it's not a real Mac App.
  • Reply 7 of 10
    drblankdrblank Posts: 3,385member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post



    Does this mean that there is now finally a useful metric for comparing Android and iOS devices to one another? Anyone with experience care to comment?


    a benchmark test is just testing the hardware.  It's not testing the OS or any application.  Some OSs require a certain amount of processing power (CPU and/or GPU) just to run smoothly, but these tests won't tell you anything like that.   All a geekbench or other benchmarking s/w is really going to do is put the device in a battery of tests to compare against another model.  But I would only compare models from one to the other that run the same OS.  It's kind of silly to compare the hardware that runs Android against the hardware that runs IOS, because one OS actually requires more processing power to run smoothly whereas the other doesn't.     These tests won't tell you that that I'm aware of.  Plus the OS developers won't tell you what geekbench score you need in order to run a certain version OS for it to run "smoothly".


     


    I personally never really thought much of these types of tests in comparing platforms.  I look at the tests when comparing one model computer against another but they should be running the exact same OS.

  • Reply 8 of 10
    drblankdrblank Posts: 3,385member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by EricTheHalfBee View Post


     


    Doubt it. Geekbench is like putting your cars engine on a dyno to measure the horsepower.


     


    If Car A has 300HP and Car B has 600HP, is Car B faster? You can't say unless you know how much each car weighs. If Car B is twice as heavy then they will accelerate about the same.


     


    The GS4 CPU benchmarks about 2X as fast as the A6 in the iPhone 5. Yet in real-world benchmark tests (like Safari) the iPhone 5 is just as fast.


     


    To be blunt, Android is twice as heavy as iOS and therefore requires more horsepower to go just as fast.



    You forgot gear ratio of the transmission and rear end, tire specs, skill set of the driver if a different driver, torque, whether someone is using NOS and how it's set. Etc.


     


    Yeah, these tests are just to test the hardware, but most people just want to say their processor is faster than the other guy's processor because they want to have bragging rights, since that's about the only they they have to brag about.  Bottom line is one has to use it and figure out if the OS runs smoothly or not on the hardware you are getting.

  • Reply 9 of 10
    droidftwdroidftw Posts: 1,009member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post



    Does this mean that there is now finally a useful metric for comparing Android and iOS devices to one another? Anyone with experience care to comment?


     


    Geekbench 3 will only tell you how effectively your device runs Geekbench 3.

  • Reply 10 of 10
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    droidftw wrote: »
    Geekbench 3 will only tell you how effectively your device runs Geekbench 3.

    32bit Geekbench 3, if you want 64bit you have to pay.

    700
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