^I guess TRIM in 4.3 might be responsible for increased performance.
On an unrelated side note, ARM is kinda in a shitty situation:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7126/the-arm-diaries-part-2-understanding-the-cortex-a12/4
They are jumping ship from the A15/A7 idea and just came up with a new, A12 core. The bummer is, that it's just an updated A9 core (40% faster) and devices running those chips are supposed to hit the market by the end of 2014/early 2015. A9 was a 2009 core though and nobody uses that anymore, as they're just way too slow already.
The change comes a little late, considering how Qualcomm's Krait 300 is better than that now. A very interesting situation though. The new A57 cores which were supposed to replace A15 next year will be mostly reserved for servers, as A15 seems like a missed idea for mobiles because of high power drain already.
I guess ARM kinda went wrong way, hoping to take a part of the PC market by coming up with A15, and not having a balanced successor to the A9. Qualcomm didn't help by having just the perfect core like that - Krait, which was also ahead of its time and offered bigger performance jump than anyone expected. It was so big that it's already as good as ARM wants to be in 2 years from now.
Since Qualcomm basically build their own cores taking what they need from ARM's designs, and ARM are getting so slow now, I guess I was right saying the mobile performance race is going to slow down soon. That is unless Intel becomes a serious contender. There's that perfect opportunity for them now that ARM is out of innovations for a while.
On an unrelated side note, ARM is kinda in a shitty situation:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7126/the-arm-diaries-part-2-understanding-the-cortex-a12/4
They are jumping ship from the A15/A7 idea and just came up with a new, A12 core. The bummer is, that it's just an updated A9 core (40% faster) and devices running those chips are supposed to hit the market by the end of 2014/early 2015. A9 was a 2009 core though and nobody uses that anymore, as they're just way too slow already.
The change comes a little late, considering how Qualcomm's Krait 300 is better than that now. A very interesting situation though. The new A57 cores which were supposed to replace A15 next year will be mostly reserved for servers, as A15 seems like a missed idea for mobiles because of high power drain already.
I guess ARM kinda went wrong way, hoping to take a part of the PC market by coming up with A15, and not having a balanced successor to the A9. Qualcomm didn't help by having just the perfect core like that - Krait, which was also ahead of its time and offered bigger performance jump than anyone expected. It was so big that it's already as good as ARM wants to be in 2 years from now.
Since Qualcomm basically build their own cores taking what they need from ARM's designs, and ARM are getting so slow now, I guess I was right saying the mobile performance race is going to slow down soon. That is unless Intel becomes a serious contender. There's that perfect opportunity for them now that ARM is out of innovations for a while.