How strong is the Apple M1 Ultra? In specific loads and applications, it is true that the cattle are a mess, but away from their own optimization and areas of expertise, the gap is still very large, far from reaching the seconds and seconds that Apple advertises.
PassMark has now updated the single-core, multi-core CPU performance rankings, especially with AMD's latest release of the Zen3 Architecture Thread Ripper PRO 5000WX series, and we've got the 20-core M1 Ultra to try to challenge it.
In terms of single core, Intel 12th generation Core directly dominates the list, monopolizing the top 11, i9-12900KF got the highest score of 4220 points, M1 Ultra is the 12th place, the score is 3896, compared to the first place behind 7.7%, the gap is not very large.
Of course, the M1 Ultra is just a violent double Die stack, the infrastructure has not changed, the frequency can not change significantly, so the single-core performance of M1 Max, M1 Pro, M1 is not much different, only up to 3.5%.
In terms of multi-core, AMD's thread ripper and Xiaolong are not polite, and the latest 64 core thread ripper PRO 5995WX is the first time to break through 100,000 points, reaching 108822.
The M1 Ultra score is 41306, a 2.6-fold gap over the Ripper PRO 5995WX.
However, it still slightly outperformed the i9-12900KF of the large and small core architecture with a slight advantage of 1%, while the AMD Ryzen™ 9 5950X lagged behind by 10.6%.
Of course, the M1 Ultra is very unfair to the thread ripper, and here is just to see how much the difference between the two is, not too real.