![]() ![]() In that regard, the Intel chip has a solid lead of 25% over the M1, with a multi-core score of 9002. The M1 also dominates Intel’s 10th generation Comet Lake chip (found in the high-end 27” iMac) in single-core performance by 38% - however, multi-core performance is a different story. According to these results, the 2021 M1 iMac far outperforms the now-antiquated 2019 21.5” model equipped with an Intel chip (which produced a Geekbench single-core score of 1109, a whopping 56% lower score than the new 24” iMac). ![]() The 8 CPU cores show a base frequency of 3.2GHz. The benchmark results shown were run on a Mac labelled iMac21,1 (which is probably the cheapest entry-level 7-core GPU model), running macOS 11.3. The full report found on Geekbench is shown below. The leaked benchmarks for this new iMac are slightly better than those from last year’s M1 MacBook Pro, MacBook Air and Mac mini, with an increase in aggregate multi-core CPU performance score of just over 100. The benchmarks found on Geekbench show the possibility of a 56% upgrade in single-core performance and a 24% upgrade in multi-core performance, compared to its predecessors with the Intel CPUs. The new iMac is powered by the same M1 chip as its younger MacBook brothers.īenchmarks for the new M1 powered iMac have recently surfaced on the internet, promising a huge upgrade over its predecessors. Apple recently released a new 24” iMac at its Spring Loaded event. These results appear to be from the base model 24-inch iMac.Īs the M1 chip continues its supremacy in the market, it’s not a big surprise to learn that the M1 iMac outperforms the M1 MacBooks, which were released in the fall of 2020.The results for the new M1 iMac aren’t drastically different from those of the M1 MacBook Pro and Mac mini.A week before the new iMac begins shipping to customers, benchmarks have already been found on Geekbench. ![]()
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