In last week's high-end custom version of the 1.3GHz version of the 12-inch MacBook shipped, Geekbench 3 also quickly to the new device ran the test, and the external release, the following is its specific test results:
MacBook 1.1GHz
32 digits: Single core average 2212, multi-core average 4070
64 digits: Single core average 2428, multi-core average 4592
MacBook 1.2GHz
32 digits: Single core average 2348, multi-core average 4603
64 digits: Single core average 2579, multi-core average 5185
MacBook 1.3GHz
32 digits: Single core average 2271, multi-core average 4841
64 digits: Single core average 2816, multi-core average 5596
The 1.3GHz MacBook 64-bit score and 1.1GHZ models were upgraded by 16%-22%, up 8% to 9% compared with the 1.2GHz version. The current 32-digit 1.3GHz MacBook is the only one running, which is why its single core score is lower than other models.
Combined with the results of Geekbench 3, the 1.3GHz MacBook score was similar to that of Apple's 1.4GHz Mac, such as the 21.5-inch IMAC and the early 2014 starter MacBook Air. The MacBook Air's 32-bit monocytes and multi-core scores were about 2400 and 4700, and 64 bits scored about 2700 and 5300.
Geekbench 3 's single core fraction responds to the device's ability to handle tasks that are not large, such as web browsing or word processing, and multi-core scores are the devices that handle complex tasks, such as video rendering.
The 1.3GHz version of the MacBook offers only the production of orders, although some authorized distributors have now started discounting this version of the device.