
- LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA FOR ANDROID
- LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA ANDROID
- LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA PRO
- LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA PROFESSIONAL
LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA PROFESSIONAL
The Advanced and Professional version appear identical but commercial use is not allowed by the Advanced version. All versions perform the same benchmarks, but the standard version displays ads, and does not allow to submit your device score. There are three versions: Standard (free), Advanced ($2.99) and Professional ($24.99).
LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA ANDROID
The Android version costs $0.99 on Google Play. It is available for Android, iOS, Linux, Mac and Windows, and features an online browser. GeekBench 2 – Geekbench measures the CPU (float and integer) and memory performance of your processor.The app is available free of charge on Google Play. This is one of the most demanding benchmark to test the GPU 3D capabilities. The tests focus on graphics and computation capabilities. GLBenchmark – GLBenchmark measures and compares the performance of OpenGL ES implementation of different mobile devices.The Android app shows the results in text format for 6 different tests and an overall score, There’s no database to compare with other devices. CaffeineMark – This benchmark is probably the reference when it comes to test Java performance on different platforms/operating systems.
LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA PRO
The only difference between the two is the Pro version does not show ads.
LINPACK BENCHMARK JAVA FOR ANDROID
There are 2 versions in Google play: Linpack for Android (free) and Linpack Pro for Android ($1.99). Linpack – The LINPACK Benchmarks are normally used to measure the floating point computing power of a given processor, but Greene Computing, the company behind this benchmark, explains that in Android, “this test is more a reflection of the state of the Android Dalvik Virtual Machine than of the floating point performance of the underlying processor”.(Note: Version 3.0 will be release on the 26th of November with several improvements, and scores won’t be comparable to 2.x versions) It gives you a total score as well as separate score for RAM, CPU integer, CPU float, GPU 2D, GPU 3D, database I/O and SD card read/write speed. Antutu – Antutu must be the most widely used benchmark for Android.It is available free of charge on Google Play. It will show graphs with comparison to a limited number (5) of other Android devices. AndEBench – This is an Android benchmark by EEMCB (The Embedded Microprocessor Consortium Benchmark) that focuses on CPU and Dalvik interpreter performance, and gives you two numbers of iteration: one for native mode, one for Java mode.The first link is to the official website and the other link(s) to Google Play. When I do some reviews, I usually simply use Antutu and Quadrant benchmarks to assess the performance of the devices, but Linaro uses many more benchmarks which I’ll list below. I’ll go over the “Benchmarking and Optimization Opportunities” slides, where we can learn which Android Benchmarks Linaro use, how they’ve decreased benchmark results variance, which parts of the system are actually tested by benchmarks (profiling), and what they plan to do to further optimize Android on ARM. Linaro has recently posted the presentation slides and I’ll have a look at a few of those slides in details and try to post information that I feel can be interesting. 2 2012 (LCE12) and included 3 mini-summits about Android, big.LITTLE and ARMv8. Linaro Connect Europe occurred in Copenhagen on Oct.
