QuoteIntel was able to show the Core i7-1355U outperforming the Ryzen 7 7840U. Taking a broader view sees the latter push ahead of the former by an average of 10% though
The author probably drew conclusions based on an alternative reality. In those test results, key tests for heavy floating point loads, I see the 7840U having an advantage of more than 35%.
And that's without taking into account that the 7840U can maintain this performance at lower consumption indefinitely, while the 1355U has peak multi-threaded performance at which it quickly succumbs to lower values at exactly the same consumption. like 7840U, i.e. the real loss of the 1355U (as the tests in laptops prove) loses by more than 40% almost everywhere, except for single-core tests (pulse performance) and tests where the emphasis is on memory controller performance, where Intel is still in the lead as 5 years ago and as I have mentioned more than once was written.
Thus, except for tasks where the emphasis is clearly on memory bandwidth (for example, Photoshop), the 1355U is outperformed by the 7840U.
And the only reason why Intel is not yet bankrupt and is still sold everywhere is because they have their own factories and a market share of 5:1 compared to AMD, which is not worried about real market saturation - because it does not want to increase its market share over 25%, which has been proven over the last 8 years. Those. AMD is essentially a hidden anti-monopoly layer for Intel, their secret formal protection from anti-monopolyists and thanks to secret cross-licensing schemes (which Intel refuses to provide through anti-market methods to other companies like Apple/Qualcomm/Mediatek and other players they previously suppressed, like NVidia - remember , how did they block their right to produce chipsets for x86? And what did the corrupt US antitrust officials do? But nothing!) and keeping AMD afloat in its weak years, Intel created and is creating a fictitious appearance of real competition in x86, but in reality with a share market 5:1 in favor of Intel, it is obvious that this is its monopoly market, and AMD will always remain on the border of profitability and market share, exactly as it is convenient for Intel. Until civil society (if you can still find one in the US) forces politicians to make real competition.
Well, I hope that the days of both Intel and AMD are in the past, because... Apple clearly has many times more money; in fact, it controls most of TSMC alone. Although the technical progress itself in silicon-based IT is clearly quickly approaching a fundamental dead end.
So the survival of all three depends on some upstart in IT, who will suddenly offer something new, orders of magnitude better than them, although taking into account the costs of development, in the modern world this already looks like pure fantasy - rather, the one with the most money will win here and who will be the first to buy all the developments and patents of this new "super-upstart". If this "super-upstart" is not on the horizon, then the entire IT industry, in the next at least 30 years, will be a rotten swamp, gradually reaching a complete dead end with the increase in processor performance per 1W of consumption.