My "argument" was literally posting the battery life increase and then the wonderful
@Cmaier asking if that was instead due to the networking chip, to which I explained why I thought not, instead using the engineering change of the chip to explain why I thought the battery life increased for the M5 Max chip.
I'm not technically apt enough, nor do I have the resources, nor do I honestly want to at this point spend the effort and energy delving into the nitty gritty of individual performance claims and cross comparing using a chip that isn't even out. To be clear, I was speaking about general performance benchmarks when using M3 Pro situation as context like Geekbench.
My official "position" is this:
1. the new P core is more performant than E, and more efficient than S.
2. This allowed them to change the core configuration from 12 HP/4 HE set up to 6HP/12HE, which combined with the new fusion tech allowed them to 1) boost overall performance (I was using code compilation as one example), 2) boost battery life, and 3) maintain thermal efficiency.
3. N1 chip helps
It is a fact that the M5 Max chip has increased its battery life and performance and core count across both models.
MacBook Pro 14":
20 hours of streaming, and 13 hours of wireless web for M5 Max
18 hours/13 hours for M4 Max
22 hours/14 hours for M5 Pro
22 hours/14 hours for M4 Pro
MacBook Pro 16":
22 hours of streaming, and 16 hours of web for M5 Max
21 hours/14 hours for M4 Max
24 hours/17 hours for M5 Pro
24 hours/17 hours for M4 Pro
13" MacBook Air:
18 hours streaming, 15 hours wireless web for M5
18 hours/15 hours for M4
15" macbook Air:
18 hours streaming, and 15 hours of wireless web for M5
18 hours streaming, and 15 hours of wireless web for M4
Explain to me why you think it's the N1 chip contributing most of the battery life increase and not the new chip, despite the fact that the MBA has the N1 chip and doesn't have any battery increase at all. I'm not the expert.