With speculation suggesting that Sony will change its release strategy for its flagship smartphones, passing two devices to one, it is reported that the Z4 Xperia Sony will not happen before this summer. But this did not prevent him from calibrated against the competition.
See also : Microsoft wants Windows 10 available in June
According to the benchmark spotted on Geekbench, the future Sony smartphone will have a Qualcomm MSM8994 processor (aka the octo-core Snapdragon 810). While we can not be certain that this is the Xperia Z4, it is a high-end processor that can be expected in the next Sony's flagship smartphone. In other words, it seems very likely that this is he.
We can see from the listing that is clocked at 1.55 GHz, suggesting that it was the four slower cores that have been calibrated. There are also 3 GB of RAM listed. It also runs Android 5.0.2 Lollipop.
Slower than the competition
Concerning the scores, the Sony Xperia Z4 if it's him, of course, achieved a score of 1196 points in single heart and a 3576 score in multicore.
As we have recently seen a prototype of the Samsung Galaxy S6 achieve a single heart to score 1520 points and a multicore point score of 5478, and even that the LG G Flex 2 (which also uses a Snapdragon 810 ) got a score of 1292 points for the mono-heart and 3604 for multi-cores, each apparently using the slower cores also the results of the Xperia Z4 does not seem as though this.
But benchmarks do not necessarily reveal the final version of the smartphone. In fact, if the Xperia Z4 actually happens this summer, Sony has plenty of time to refine and polish the performance of its flagship. Let's hope that the company will use the time wisely.
Anyway, it is also reported that Sony will market the Xperia Z4 two options. Thus, one could find a model with a screen with a resolution Quad HD, and another with a 1080p resolution. Although we do not know the extent of the price difference between the two devices, one can assume that it is higher for the Quad HD model.
It remains to be seen whether the Japanese firm will actually give up its pace of publication every six months, and if it is going to take the risk of going after Samsung, HTC, LG or Apple to name a few. Unless Sony decides to surprise us for the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.
See also : Microsoft wants Windows 10 available in June
According to the benchmark spotted on Geekbench, the future Sony smartphone will have a Qualcomm MSM8994 processor (aka the octo-core Snapdragon 810). While we can not be certain that this is the Xperia Z4, it is a high-end processor that can be expected in the next Sony's flagship smartphone. In other words, it seems very likely that this is he.
We can see from the listing that is clocked at 1.55 GHz, suggesting that it was the four slower cores that have been calibrated. There are also 3 GB of RAM listed. It also runs Android 5.0.2 Lollipop.
Slower than the competition
Concerning the scores, the Sony Xperia Z4 if it's him, of course, achieved a score of 1196 points in single heart and a 3576 score in multicore.
As we have recently seen a prototype of the Samsung Galaxy S6 achieve a single heart to score 1520 points and a multicore point score of 5478, and even that the LG G Flex 2 (which also uses a Snapdragon 810 ) got a score of 1292 points for the mono-heart and 3604 for multi-cores, each apparently using the slower cores also the results of the Xperia Z4 does not seem as though this.
But benchmarks do not necessarily reveal the final version of the smartphone. In fact, if the Xperia Z4 actually happens this summer, Sony has plenty of time to refine and polish the performance of its flagship. Let's hope that the company will use the time wisely.
Anyway, it is also reported that Sony will market the Xperia Z4 two options. Thus, one could find a model with a screen with a resolution Quad HD, and another with a 1080p resolution. Although we do not know the extent of the price difference between the two devices, one can assume that it is higher for the Quad HD model.
It remains to be seen whether the Japanese firm will actually give up its pace of publication every six months, and if it is going to take the risk of going after Samsung, HTC, LG or Apple to name a few. Unless Sony decides to surprise us for the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.