

We should be seeing additional M1 Max and M1 Pro Geekbench results in the coming days as the new MacBook Pro models are expected to arrive to customers next Tuesday and media review units will be going out even sooner than that. The MacBook Pro (15-inch Retina Mid 2015) with an Intel Core i7-4870HQ processor scores 1,057 for single-core performance and 3,553 for multi-core performance in the Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark. Geekbench 6 scores are calibrated against a baseline score of 2,500 (which is the score of a Dell. These scores are the average of 8,011 user results uploaded to the Geekbench Browser. He initially said there was an issue with the frequency estimation, but he believes that this is an issue with Geekbench and not the processor. The MacBook Air (2022) with an Apple M2 processor scores 2,568 for single-core performance and 9,629 for multi-core performance in the Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark. Geekbench 6 scores are calibrated against a baseline score of 2,500 (which is the. These scores are the average of 2,393 user results uploaded to the Geekbench Browser. The MacBook Pro (13-inch Mid 2017) with an Intel Core i5-7360U processor scores 1,094 for single-core performance and 2,292 for multi-core performance in the Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark. The MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) with an Apple M2 Pro processor scores 2,643 for single-core performance and 14,191 for multi-core performance in the Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark.

#MACBOOK PRO GEEKBENCH SCORE MAC#
The machine with the chip in question is running macOS 12.4, which we have seen in our analytics, and Geekbench's John Poole believes the result is legitimate. The MacBook Pro (13-inch Mid 2017) is a Mac laptop with an Intel Core i5-7360U processor. The 11542 multi-core score is on par with the late 2019 Mac Pro that is equipped with a 12-core Intel Xeon W-3235. The chip features a single-core score of 1749 and a multi-core score of 11542, which offers double the multi-core performance of the M1 chip that's in the 13-inch MacBook Pro machine.īased on these numbers, the M1 Max outperforms all Mac chips with the exception of the Mac Pro and iMac models equipped with Intel's high-end 16 to 24-core Xeon chips. These scores are the average of 3,995 user results uploaded to the Geekbench Browser. Just after Apple's event introducing the new MacBook Pro models with M1 Pro and M1 Max chips, the first benchmark for the high-end M1 Max chip with 10-core CPU and 32-core GPU appears to have surfaced. The MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) with an Apple M2 Max processor scores 2,734 for single-core performance and 14,463 for multi-core performance in the Geekbench 6 CPU Benchmark.
