ARM unveils Cortex A-76 and Mali G-76 with improved performance and power efficiency
ARM architecture, which makes up a significant part of mobile devices and is at the center of performance, will enter the market quite quickly with new developments. Each year, ARM architecture is getting stronger and stronger, and we are already informed about the emerging chipsets and the smartphones that will be introduced in the coming years. A new graphics processor with 8K resolution video processing capacity, known as Mali-G76, faces a serious darkness. The Cortex-A-76 chipset looks quite advanced compared to the previous Cortex A-75, but it will show you how effective these data will be.
The Cortex-A-75 was a chipset based on 10nm architecture and capable of up to 2.8Ghz speeds. The Cortex-A-76 has a 7nm architecture and can go up to 3GHz clock frequency. In this sense, the Cortex-A76 is 35% faster, with 35% higher power efficiency. The Cortex-A-76 brings about a 90% improvement in artificial intelligence (AI) and memory bandwidth, while the 4x development of its siblings will do a pretty good job of understanding and interpreting. ARM markets these CPUs and chipsets by describing them as a "laptop computer core". The early iterations of the Cortex-A-76 can be matched together with the Cortex-A5-5 cores. However, while the Cortex-A-75 cores are still heavily used on smartphones, it is highly likely that the next few years will continue to be used with low-budget budget-friendly phones.
The Mali-G76 GPU has 7nm architecture and will not be in any delay because it is from the Bitfrost family. This new GPU has a 50% improvement over the GPU and is a GPU far above the brother of the Mali-G72. The Mali-V76 GPU, known as the new video processor, can process 8K videos up to 30FPS and convert between 60FPS and 120FPS into 4K images. So in terms of these features, it would not be so wrong to call it top-level graphics processors. Lastly, let's add that this GPU improves visual quality by 25% in quality, and plays 8K videos with 120FPS. Read the full article













