Pre-orders for the iPhone 4S only began shipping this week, but a handful of early owners have already taken Apple's first A5-based smartphone for a test run, and they've got the benchmarks to prove it. The results, obtained by AnandTech, are hardly what we'd call shocking. Well, it's a dual-core, and we actually already have the performance result of the A5 CPU from the iPad 2, so it shouldn't run too far anyway.
In terms of Javascript performance (pictured above), the 4S measures up rather nicely against the Tegra 2-based Honeycomb competition, while out-dueling the iPhone 4 in overall CPU muscle. Geekbench results, meanwhile, clock
the 4S at around 800MHz, with a score of 623. That's about 25 percent
lower than the A5-based iPad 2, but notably higher than the iPhone 4 (see graphic, after the break).
When
it comes to GPU performance, GLBenchmark 2.1 tests in 1280 x 720,
off-screen render mode place Apple's new handset well above the Galaxy S
II, with scores of 122.7 and 67.1, respectively. It still trails the
iPad 2, not surprisingly, but the 4S' scores show a major advantage over
the iPhone 4, which registered a score of 15.3.
For more statistics and graphics, check out the source link below. Are you impressed with the result? Well, Samsung
and Co. will most probably be launching quad-core handsets very soon,
which will most probably crush the A5 CPU's performance. So we can see
why the Apple fans are disappointed.

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