renky Posted August 2, 2018 Posted August 2, 2018 If running debian is the rk3288 or rk3328 fastest? Thanks.
chrisf Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 Ones a quad core 1.8GHz A17 and the other is a quad core 1.5GHz A53. For most tasks you'll probably find the 3288 to be faster. It's got a faster GPU. 4x the L2 cache, dual-channel memory bus The A53 has crypto extensions though, so VPN/SSL/etc will be faster. The 3288 is a high-end ARMv7 SoC, the 3328 is a low-end ARMv8 SoC.
tkaiser Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 8 hours ago, renky said: If running debian is the rk3288 or rk3328 fastest? Impossible to answer if you don't tell your use case. 1 hour ago, chrisf said: Ones a quad core 1.8GHz A17 and the other is a quad core 1.5GHz A53 https://github.com/ThomasKaiser/sbc-bench/blob/master/Results.md If the RK3288 claims to run at 1.8 GHz it's less than 1730 MHz in reality and until recently all Linux OS images for RK3328 were limited to 1.3 GHz. We changed this just recently in Armbian (nightlies) and enabled the '1.4 GHz OPP' (1380 MHz in reality) by default while with ayufan images you need to enable higher cpufreq OPP yourself. So usually it's 1726 vs. 1286 MHz which doesn't matter that much since as you pointed out the RK3288 uses high-end ARM cores while the RK3328 relies on slow A53 single-threaded peak performance of the RK3288 at '1.8 GHz' is ~1550 7-zip MIPS while RK3328 scores ~1000 at '1.4 GHz' sustained CPU performance with the RK3288 without huge heatsink (or fan) will pretty fast drop down to RK3328 levels or below. The RK3288 generates way more heat it's always about 'use case first' -- for a 'Desktop Linux' totally different performance metrics are important compared to the 'NAS use case' or when the board should serve as a VPN endpoint. 1
Tido Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 4 hours ago, chrisf said: 3288 is a high-end ARMv7 SoC You made me curious so I searched a bit and found this interesting information... if it is true: It integrates four Cortex-A12 cores clocked at up to 1.8 GHz. ARM calls these cores Cortex-A17 due to them having very similar performance levels. https://www.notebookcheck.net/Rockchip-RK3288-SoC-Benchmarks-and-Specs.148374.0.html
tkaiser Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 1 hour ago, Tido said: https://www.notebookcheck.net/Rockchip-RK3288-SoC-Benchmarks-and-Specs.148374.0.html Huh? Why posting links to smelly pages found somewhere on the Internet? The RK 'open source SoCs' have a home: http://opensource.rock-chips.com/wiki_Main_Page
Tido Posted August 3, 2018 Posted August 3, 2018 14 minutes ago, tkaiser said: links to smelly pages Now and then I use them as source and actually like them. Can you elaborate what makes them smelly ?
renky Posted August 3, 2018 Author Posted August 3, 2018 Quote you don't tell your use case. On https://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/Free-shipping-7-Inch-Android-4-4-Fashion-notebook-HDMI-Laptop-inch-Dual-Core-VIA-HDMI/4362013_32893471150.html you can buy a 7 inch display notebook. There is also a 10 inch display version. I am trying to determine which mainboard I would have the notebook to have. If main priorities are free software cf free software foundation's requirements and performance adequate for common debian utilization. To me it is at the same time having a running browser. 5 open tabs. One showing a youtube video. File manager running. Email client running. Running libre office or a media player or photo editor. It seems rk cpus are the ones to select among. If choosing between the rk3288 and rk3328 the rk3328 is the better choice? Can you answer if the free vpu software will work on the rock64 rk3328? the best choice for a notebook?
chrisf Posted August 4, 2018 Posted August 4, 2018 If you're making a notebook, go for the ri3288. They were used in some cheap Chromebooks.
TonyMac32 Posted August 4, 2018 Posted August 4, 2018 Yes, the Veyron Chromebooks can be had cheaply, actually.
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