Quote from: A on March 06, 2020, 20:25:01
@ARMer - a video test doesn't use the CPU much unless you don't have hardware acceleration for that encoding. Disable hardware decoding and see if you can get even half that battery life while watching a video.
As others mentioned, you have to test via same workload.
Quote from: ARMer on March 06, 2020, 15:11:44run the test we are talking about, on your machine, and then talk about fanboys. please and thank you.
Not sure what exactly PC Mark 10 does to check the battery life during video playback. But on my Dell XPS 13 7390 2-in-1 (not 4k) non-stop video playback from Youtube lasts slightly above 14 hours with 52Wh battery and ~200 nitts. While I understand that AMD fanboys and Intel haters (or perhaps both at the same time) love these kind of articles, as far as I am concerned the presented performance is nothing impressive for CPU intended for ultra portable.
Quote from: ARMer on March 06, 2020, 15:11:44
Not sure what exactly PC Mark 10 does to check the battery life during video playback. But on my Dell XPS 13 7390 2-in-1 (not 4k) non-stop video playback from Youtube lasts slightly above 14 hours with 52Wh battery and ~200 nitts. While I understand that AMD fanboys and Intel haters (or perhaps both at the same time) love these kind of articles, as far as I am concerned the presented performance is nothing impressive for CPU intended for ultra portable.