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Opencl

All articles tagged with #opencl

Exynos 2600’s Xclipse 960 Outpaces Snapdragon X Elite in OpenCL, Vulkan Results Tilt to the Other Side
technology1 month ago

Exynos 2600’s Xclipse 960 Outpaces Snapdragon X Elite in OpenCL, Vulkan Results Tilt to the Other Side

Samsung’s Exynos 2600 with a custom RDNA 4-based Xclipse 960 on a 2nm GAA process shows a 21.8% OpenCL lead over Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite in Geekbench 6 (Exynos 24,964 vs. 20,492) when tested on the Galaxy Book4 Edge in Balanced mode, but Vulkan results tell a different story, with the Snapdragon Galaxy Book4 Edge reportedly leading (28,934) and Exynos Vulkan numbers not yet published; Samsung also touts Heat Pass Block for better thermals and suggests potential gains in higher-power modes, with a South Korea-bound Galaxy S25+ reference spotted in Geekbench 6.

Exynos 2400: A Strong Contender Against Apple M2 and Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.
technology2 years ago

Exynos 2400: A Strong Contender Against Apple M2 and Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

The Exynos 2400's Geekbench Compute or OpenCL results have been revealed, showing that Samsung's upcoming SoC is performing close to the Apple M2, designed for portable Macs and powerful tablets. The Exynos 2400 reportedly obtained a score of 26,829 and a clock speed of 1,756MHz. The chipset is rumored to be 30% faster than the A16 Bionic and Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 in Geekbench 5's multi-core results. However, the results should be taken with a pinch of salt, as they may be from an Exynos development kit that outperforms the commercial version.

technology2 years ago

AMD Boosts Linux Gaming with Mesa and Driver Updates for Steam Deck.

Mesa 23.1 has enabled Rusticl Rust-written OpenCL driver support for RadeonSI, thanks to a merge request by Red Hat's Karol Herbst. This modern OpenCL support for RadeonSI is an alternative to using the ROCm OpenCL stack or the aging "Clover" Gallium3D OpenCL driver. Rusticl has previously outperformed ROCm OpenCL in benchmarks, and going the Rusticl route should be easier for running open-source Radeon OpenCL on non-enterprise Linux distributions where ROCm isn't officially certified/tested.