![]() ![]() During the benchmark testing, XDA found that the OnePlus 3T’s small and massive cores were clocking at round 0.98GHz and1.29GHz respectively when there was no CPU load. However, what set the alarm bells ringing was the Chinese model of the Reno3 with the newer and supposedly sooner Dimensity 1000L chipset, performing much worse in those same benchmark exams. The weblog says it started its investigation when it discovered that the European version of the Oppo Reno three Pro with the older Helio P95 chipset was returning considerably greater benchmark scores than what was expected from a Cortex-A75 class SoC. It’s also perhaps noteworthy to keep in thoughts that OnePlus did the same trick with the OnePlus 2, where weaker cores were most popular for certain apps, while others were allowed to use the entire chip. Now, OnePlus has responded to the accusations with an evidence as to why the company throttles the performance on the OnePlus 9 series and it sort of is smart. However OxygenOS would not offer the restricted efficiency to benchmarking apps, which Geekbench sees as dishonest. In essence, the OxygenOS analyzes the apps it’s going to most of the time restrict the efficiency in what we assume is a bid to extend battery life. From our testing, it appears that this has been a “feature” of Hydrogen OS for fairly some time now, and was not added to Oxygen OS until the group builds main as much as the Nougat release. In response to this, the standard benchmark software ‘Geekbench’ has introduced that it has removed ‘OnePlus 9’ and ‘OnePlus 9 Pro’ from the aggregated knowledge review. So far, there's no official response from the company.2021 March and smartphone ‘OnePlus 9’ that OnePlus introduced in the ‘OnePlus 9 Pro’, we discovered that the performance of some applications is proscribed. It would be interesting to see how this story unfolds and if OnePlus will take any action. The effect is very similar though - benchmarks scores would indicate a level of performance that just isn't there for apps. Instead OxygenOS was found run at its designed limit during benchmarks, whereas just about every other app gets less than the full performance. It's not quite the same case as the cheating modes in the past where manufacturers will tune their phones so they ignore thermal limits when running benchmarks. In Geekbench's books, this is performance manipulation and will also look into other OnePlus devices to see if the same applies to them as well. Or in other words, the system looks for specific apps to utilize its full performance rather than boosting performance when any app demands it. Geekbench says that the system makes performance decisions based on the applications' identifiers rather than behavior. That's why Geekbench took the action of removing the OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro from its database. However OxygenOS would not offer the limited performance to benchmarking apps, which Geekbench sees as cheating. In essence, the OxygenOS analyzes the apps it will more often than not limit the performance in what we assume is a bid to extend battery life. In a recent lengthy and in-depth investigation, AnandTech found a very interesting "optimization" on the OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro when it comes to various apps. ![]()
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