Wednesday, October 23rd 2024

Google's Upcoming Tensor G5 and G6 Specs Might Have Been Revealed Early

Details of what is claimed to be Google's upcoming Tensor G5 and G6 SoCs have popped up over on Notebookcheck.net and the site claims to have found the specs on a public platform, without going into any further details. Those that were betting on the Tensor G5—codenamed Laguna—delivering vastly improved performance over the Tensor G4, are likely to be disappointed, at least on the CPU side of things. As previous rumours have suggested, the chip is expected to be manufactured by TSMC, using its N3E process node, but the Tensor G5 will retain the single Arm Cortex-X4 core, although it will see a slight upgrade to five Cortex-A725 cores vs. the three Cortex-A720 cores of the Tensor G4. The G5 loses two Cortex-A520 cores in favour of the extra Cortex-A725 cores. The Cortex-X4 will also remain clocked at the same peak 3.1 GHz as that of the Tensor G4.

Interestingly it looks like Google will drop the Arm Mali GPU in favour of an Imagination Technologies DXT GPU, although the specs listed by Notebookcheck doesn't add up with any of the specs listed by Imagination Technologies. The G5 will continue to support 4x 16-bit LPDDR5 or LPDDR5X memory chips, but Google has added support for UFS 4.0 memory, something that's been a point of complaint for the Tensor G4. Other new additions is support for 10 Gbps USB 3.2 Gen 2 and PCI Express 4.0. Some improvements to the camera logic has also been made, with support for up to 200 Megapixel sensors or 108 Megapixels with zero shutter lag, but if Google will use such a camera or not is anyone's guess at this point in time.
The Tensor G6—codename Malibu—will allegedly be produced on TSMC's N3P node and it will see Google drop the X4 core in favour of a single X900-series core, although it will apparently not be the X925 which was announced earlier this year. It will be paired with six A730 cores and a single A530 core. The GPU will again be from IMG and this time it's listed as the CXTP. There are no other major changes in the specs here, but the publication claims that we should expect a clock speed of up to 3.2 GHz and adds that the G6 might also feature ray tracing support, something the G5 will not feature. In other words, those that were hoping to see big jumps in performance with a move away from Samsung as its SoC partner, are likely going to be disappointed, as it looks like Google has no intention of taking the fight to Qualcomm when it comes to its Pixel phone processors. That said, it looks like Google will continue to churn out powerful enough chips and we'll most likely be seeing more AI specific features in the future as well, since Google is betting hard on AI at the moment, but the revealed specs didn't mention anything about any such features.
Source: Notebookcheck
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3 Comments on Google's Upcoming Tensor G5 and G6 Specs Might Have Been Revealed Early

#1
bonehead123
TheLostSwedeGoogle is betting hard on AI at the moment, but the revealed specs didn't mention anything about any such features.
Well that's because Google IS the AI, and the AI IS Google, and they didn't "mention any such features" because AI is all of the features, everywhere, all at once, all the time, hehehe :)
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#2
GoldenX
So were getting something worse than Mali now, much MUCH worse.
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#3
trsttte
They are using some very weird core configurations, it's cool to try different things but historically it hasn't gone that great. Tensor G1 was in my opinion the best configuration they tried with 2 large X cores, 2 medium A7xx class and 4 small A5xx class. This supposed leak looks to me like the Tensor G5 will be more of a node change then a very different SoC (no new cores for example), ignoring all the AI crap of course.

Hope it goes well, they'll probably keep being embarassed on all the benchmarks which is not great for marketing but it's not like it really matters for regular use.
GoldenXSo were getting something worse than Mali now, much MUCH worse.
Let's wait and see, Imagination has open sourced and upstreamed several of their drivers, Google might be counting on that for better support.
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Dec 11th, 2024 18:45 CST change timezone

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