> We have a GPU/CPU fusion chip that is unremarkable, performant and runs well under linux out of the box. There isn't a lot of novelty in that which is, in itself, pretty remarkable.
With this reasoning, I'd probably argue all modern cpus and GPUs aren't particularly remarkable/novel. That could help even be fine.
At the end of the day, these benchmarks are all meant to inform on relative performance, price, and power consumption for end users to make informed decisions (imo). The relative* comparisons are low-key just as important as the new bench data point.
With this reasoning, I'd probably argue all modern cpus and GPUs aren't particularly remarkable/novel. That could help even be fine.
At the end of the day, these benchmarks are all meant to inform on relative performance, price, and power consumption for end users to make informed decisions (imo). The relative* comparisons are low-key just as important as the new bench data point.