iPad&iPhone user

A14 Bionic FAQ: What you need to know about Apple’s 5nm processor

Apple has revealed a handful of details of its latest and most powerful system-on-chip. Jason Cross reports

-

As it revealed the new iPad Air during its Time Flies event, Apple took the wraps off its latest mobile system-on-chip (SoC), the A14 Bionic. Built with a bleeding-edge 5nm manufactur­ing process, it is Apple’s most advanced SoC ever and likely the fastest mobile chip on the planet. Earlier this year, we took some educated

guesses about what we might expect from the A14. Now that Apple has revealed a few details, this FAQ can tell you what this fantastic SoC is going to do for the Apple products in which it appears.

THE FIRST 5NM CHIP

As expected, Apple claims to be the “first in the industry” to make use of the 5nm process technology to manufactur­e chips. That means smaller chip features and more transistor­s in a given amount of area. It also typically means lower power consumptio­n for a given amount of work.

The process allows Apple to stuff 11.8 billion transistor­s into the A14. That’s about 40 per cent more than the 8.5 billion in the A13.

More transistor­s means more cores, more cache, and more advanced features.

STILL A SIX-CORE CPU, BUT FASTER

Just as in the A11, A12 and A13, you’ll find six CPU cores in the A14; two high-performanc­e cores and four higheffici­ency cores. Apple says the CPU has been given a “big update” in the A14, and that it runs more instructio­ns in parallel. Without further explanatio­n of what that means, it seems safe to expect that the A14 has a wider superscala­r design that can issue and process more instructio­ns per core at once. That means more instructio­ns per clock (IPC), which tends to offer better performanc­e at lower clock speeds.

Apple says the A14 has “large highperfor­mance caches” that are “sized to meet the needs of the most demanding applicatio­ns”. That probably means an increase in L2 cache over the 8MB in the A13, or perhaps even the introducti­on of L3 cache, which hasn’t been seen in an Apple SoC yet.

Apple said the CPU is 40 per cent faster than the one in the previous iPad Air, but that tablet had an A12 in it. Apple said the A13 was 20 per cent faster than the A12; that would make the A14’s CPU about 17 per cent faster than the A13.

AN ALL-NEW GPU

The A14 also features Apple’s newest GPU architectu­re with four GPU cores, the same number as in the A13. Apple says it is “scaled to deliver the maximum sustained performanc­e at the lowest possible power”.

According to Apple, the new GPU delivers a 30 per cent increase in graphics performanc­e, with the disclaimer that it is compared to the “previous generation device”

meaning the previous iPad Air’s A12. Apple said the A13’s graphics are 20 per cent faster than the A12, so the A14 taking it another 20 per cent is par for the course.

DOUBLE THE NEURAL ENGINE

Since the A11 (the first Apple chip to carry the ‘Bionic’ monicker), Apple has included a custom silicon block called the Neural Engine in its SoCs. This hardware is tailor-made to perform the kind of operations used in machine learning and AI calculatio­ns. In that chip, the Neural Engine performed 600 billion operations per second.

That grew to 5 trillion in the A12 and 6 trillion in the A13, with the latter also adding in matrix calculatio­n hardware in the CPU cores.

The A14 doubles the Neural Engine from 8 cores to 16, delivering an impressive 11 trillion operations per second. The matrix accelerati­on hardware in the CPU cores in now a faster ‘secondgene­ration’ design as well, through Apple has given no indication of what the difference­s are.

MUCH WE STILL DON’T KNOW ABOUT A14

For all that Apple has revealed about the A14 Bionic SoC, there is still much left to learn. Modern mobile system-on-chip designs have lots of custom accelerati­on hardware: image signal processing for the cameras, video encoding and decoding, cryptograp­hy and encryption accelerati­on, storage and memory controller­s, and more.

All of these things can have a meaningful impact on the experience of using our iPhones, iPads, and soon, our Macs. Apple hasn’t revealed much about these things. We know

the image signal processor is better because the iPhone 12 can do more with it, but we don’t know how much better and in what ways. The ‘Pro video’ encode and decode labels on Apple’s sheet probably refer to the 10bit HDR (with support for Dolby Vision) features we find in the iPhone 12.

We may yet learn more about the A14’s capabiliti­es as developers get their hands on the iPad Air and iPhone 12. It’s possible that, if the first Apple Silicon Macs are based on a derivative of the A14, we’ll learn more about its underpinni­ngs upon its release.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? There’s a lot in the A14 and we’ve only just scratched the surface.
There’s a lot in the A14 and we’ve only just scratched the surface.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia