Jimmyjames
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Reluctant as I am to post something from them, MaxTech just posted a video that made me think...
TLDR: the M2 has powerful efficiency cores...insanely powerful given the power usage. The video shows the M2 Air in "Low Power Mode" beating the latest Dell XPS 13 on some tasks.
I'm curious about these cores and would love the input of the many more knowledgeble members on here. What I wonder is: could these cores be the basis for a future P core? Could they be "scaled up" to give a future chip even more power and efficiency? Or are they a different kind of design with tradeoffs that would prevent todays M2 E core becoming a future M3 P core?
TLDR: the M2 has powerful efficiency cores...insanely powerful given the power usage. The video shows the M2 Air in "Low Power Mode" beating the latest Dell XPS 13 on some tasks.
I'm curious about these cores and would love the input of the many more knowledgeble members on here. What I wonder is: could these cores be the basis for a future P core? Could they be "scaled up" to give a future chip even more power and efficiency? Or are they a different kind of design with tradeoffs that would prevent todays M2 E core becoming a future M3 P core?