Update: A previous version of this article included benchmarks from a 1.9GHz Snapdragon SoC that were labeled as being from the Exynos 5 Octa SoC. The text and charts have been corrected to reflect this.
Samsung officially unveiled its new flagship Galaxy S 4 smartphone on Thursday after weeks of speculation, leaks, and strange ad campaigns. The company’s presentation was focused mostly on the software side of the equation, with all of the hardware information rattled off in just a few minutes at the beginning of the presentation.
Despite the fact that the S 4 looks a lot like its predecessor, there’s quite a bit of new hardware under the hood. Today, we wanted to take a quick look at the chip that powers the international versions of the phone, Samsung’s new Exynos 5 Octa system-on-a-chip (SoC). We should note: the US versions of the S 4 likely won’t include this chip, but if precedent tells us anything, we will eventually get our hands on it, possibly in the form of a future Samsung tablet.
It’s a given that this chip will be faster than the Exynos 4 Quad that powered the international Galaxy S III, but the new chip’s architecture also brings a few interesting things to the table. Let’s take a look.
Eight cores (technically)
Most mentions of the Exynos 5 Octa simply say that it has eight CPU cores. This isn’t untrue—the chip actually does have eight distinct CPU cores—but not all of these cores are created equal.
The biggest issue in designing a chip for a smartphone or tablet is balancing performance and power consumption, and most modern chips attempt to do both—the chips can use multiple cores and higher clock speeds when higher performance is called for, but will typically disable cores and lower clock speeds during light or idle use. The Octa attempts to solve this problem using a CPU configuration that ARM calls “big.LITTLE.”

Loading comments...