Samsung Galaxy S21

On December 4, the official Twitter channel of Samsung Exynos tweeted “Hello, World”.

Samsung Galaxy S21

This tweet has passed since the last time Samsung Exynos made a sound, and this announcement also means that Samsung’s new Exynos processor is about to meet with you.

According to previous reports, Samsung’s next-generation Exynos flagship processor is named the Exynos 2100. It will come with the Galaxy S21 series and is positioned in the same way as Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 888. Thus, we are dealing with a high-end flagship SoC.

At present, the Exynos 2100 version of the Samsung Galaxy S21 series has appeared on the GeekBench benchmark website. Both single-core and multi-core results are slightly inferior to the Snapdragon 888 version of the Samsung Galaxy S21 series.

Samsung Exynos

Exynos 2100 version of Samsung Galaxy S21+ running points

Samsung Exynos

Snapdragon 8885 version of Samsung Galaxy S21+ running points

The Samsung Galaxy S21 series offers different processor versions in different markets. The Snapdragon 888 flagship processor used by the Bank of China and the US version uses the Exynos 2100 processor for the European version.

Like the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888, the Samsung Exynos 2100 is also a 5nm chip. It has a large core (ARM Cortex X1), a large core (ARM Cortex A78) and a small core, using a “1+3+4” three-cluster architecture.

The report pointed out that the Exynos 2100 ultra-large core is clocked at 2.91GHz, the large core is clocked at 2.81GHz, and the small core is clocked at 2.21GHz.

This chip is expected to be officially announced soon, which means that the Galaxy S21 series is not far from being released.

By Argam Artashyan

Back in 2010, he was dismissed from his position as a lecturer at the university. This made him get another job at his friend’s digital marketing company as a blog writer. After a few years, when he was thinking the article writing is his mission, Google pushed the Panda update and affected the company and websites he was working at. (Un)fortunately and surprisingly, he got an offer to head a large knitting factory. In 2016, he got his Ph.D. and resumed teaching at the University … and writing tech-related articles following his passion.