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Monday June 8, 2009
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From a chip standpoint, this is one of the key questions of the iPhone 3G S launch. And one which Apple doesn't seem too inclined to answer, at least at the moment.
Which processor is in the iPhone 3G S? Odds are that it's an ARM chip, as the Samsung ARM 11 was the chip used by the previous iPhone 3G. But the real question is whether or not it's a chip from the PA Semi team that Apple acquired for $278 million in 2008.
The issue is the instruction set. Apple's iPhone OS is written for the ARM architecture, will be available for the iPhone 3G and the new 3G S; if Apple planned to move to a new processor architecture, the iPhone OS 3.0 would not straddle both phones. So we can assume that the 3G S is an ARM phone.
Unfortunately, Apple wasn't talking. I interviewed Bob Borchers, senior director of iPhone worldwide product marketing, who declined to comment on the chip's speeds, architecture, which company designed it, or even if it was an ARM architecture. "Within the mobile space we're mainly talking about what you can do with it," Borchers said.
What we don't know, as phone analyst Sascha Segan points out, is what particular flavor of ARM chip it is. Is it a Freescale Cortex chip?
A more prosaic ARM derivative, merely clocked higher? My notes show
that Apple's characterizations of the iPhone 3G S performance focused
on four key"benchmarks": the ability to lauch messages (2.1 times
faster than the 3G), loading SimCity (2.4 times faster), viewing an
Excel attachment (3.6 times faster) and loading the The New York Times.
According to Borchers, those metrics indicate "real-world things that
make a difference". The software's new voice control options and the
ability to edit video on the fly are two other indications of the
software's performance, Borchers said.
On the plus side, the new iPhone 3G S also includes substantially more battery life, as Sascha Segan captured with his camera in our liveblog story:
nine hours of Wi-Fi time for the iPhone 3G S versus six hours for the
iPhone 3G; thirty hours of audio versus twenty-four for the iPhne 3G;
and twelve hours of 2G talk time for the 3G S versus ten for the older
3G. That seems to indicate a process shrink, or shrinks, as well as
some improved power management capabilities.
One other bit of news: there is no 802.11n in the iPhone 3G S, according to Borchers.
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