Apple A7 vs Intel Celeron 430

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CPU comparison with benchmarks

-VS-

CPU lineage

Apple A7 or Apple A7 – which processor offers superior performance? In this comparison, we examine disparities and assess which of these two CPUs outperforms the other. We delve into technical specifications and benchmark outcomes.
The Apple A7 features 2 processor cores and has the capability to manage 2 threads concurrently.
It was released in Q3/2013 and belongs to the 7 generation of the Apple A series series.
The Intel Celeron 430 features 1 processor cores and has the capability to manage 1 threads concurrently.
It was released in Q2/2007 and belongs to the 1 generation of the Intel Celeron series.
To use the Intel Celeron 430, you'll need a motherboard with a LGA 775 socket.
Mobile Segment Desktop / Server
Apple A7 Name Intel Celeron 430
Apple A series Family Intel Celeron
7 Generation 1
Apple A7 Group Intel Celeron 400
 
 

CPU Cores and Base Frequency

The Apple A7 has 2 CPU cores and can calculate 2 threads in parallel.
The clock frequency of the Apple A7 is 1.4 GHz
The Intel Celeron 430 has 1 CPU cores and can calculate 1 threads in parallel.
The clock frequency of the Intel Celeron 430 is 1.8 GHz
The processor has one core only.
normal Core architecture normal
1.4 GHz Frequency 1.8 GHz
2 Threads 1
No Overclocking No
No Hyperthreading No
2 CPU Cores 1
2x Cyclone Cores 1x Core
 
 

Internal Graphics

The Apple A7 has integrated graphics, called iGPU for short.
Specifically, the Apple A7 uses the PowerVR G6430, which has 128 texture shaders
and 16 execution units.
The iGPU uses the system's main memory as graphics memory and sits on the processor's die.
The Intel Celeron 430 does not have integrated graphics.
0.45 GHz GPU frequency --
Q3/2013 Release date --
10 Direct X --
PowerVR G6430 GPU name
28 nm Technology --
-- Max. displays --
128 Shaders --
0 bytes Max. GPU Memory 0 bytes
16 Execution units --
-- Generation --
-- GPU (Turbo) --
 
 

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning

-- AI specifications --
-- AI hardware --
 
 

Hardware codec support

A photo or video codec that is accelerated in hardware can greatly accelerate the working speed of a processor and extend the battery life of notebooks or smartphones when playing videos.
No AVC --
No VC-1 --
No VP9 --
No h265 / HEVC (10 bit) --
No h264 --
No VP8 --
No h265 / HEVC (8 bit) --
No JPEG --
No AV1 --
 
 

Memory & PCIe

The processor supports a maximum memory capacity of 1.0 GB distributed across 1 memory channels. It offers a peak memory bandwidth of 12.8 GB/s. Both the type and quantity of memory can have a substantial impact on the overall system performance.
1 Memory channels 2
1.0 GB Max. Memory 16.0 GB
pci PCIe pci
No AES-NI No
No ECC No
12.8 GB/s Bandwidth --
LPDDR3-1333 Memory type DDR3-1066, DDR2-800
 
 

Thermal Management

TDP indicates the cooling solution needed to effectively manage the processor's heat. It generally provides an approximate indication of the actual power consumption of the CPU itself.
The processor has a thermal design power (TDP) of 35 W watts.
-- Tjunction max --
None TDP (PL1 / PBP) 35 W
 
 

Technical details

The Apple A7 is manufactured using a 28 nm process.
A smaller manufacturing process indicates a more contemporary and energy-efficient CPU.
In total, this processor boasts a generous 4.0 MB cache.
A substantial cache can significantly enhance the processor's performance, particularly in scenarios like gaming.
The Intel Celeron 430 is manufactured using a 65 nm process.
Q3/2013 Release date Q2/2007
APL 5698 Part Number --
1.0 MB L2-Cache 512.0 KB
None Virtualization None
ISA extensions SSE3, MMX, SSE, SSE2
Chiplet Chip design Monolithic
A7 Architecture Conroe (Core)
28 nm Technology 65 nm
Socket LGA 775
iOS Operating systems Windows 10, Linux
-- Release price --
Technical data sheet Documents Technical data sheet
ARMv8-A64 (64 bit) Instruction set (ISA) x86-64 (64 bit)
4.0 MB L3-Cache 0 bytes