System Performance

Tablets have always been devices where performance can be pushed further than a smartphone. There's much more thermal headroom and bigger batteries to drive high performance SoCs. Both Apple and NVIDIA have SoCs that cannot feasibly be put in a smartphone due to their heat and power usage, and these chips find their way into tablets where these factors can be managed and the additional performance can be utilized by more sophisticated applications. At the same time, some vendors opt to use the same silicon in both phones and tablets. In the case of the Galaxy Tab S2, Samsung has decided to use their Exynos 5433 SoC which previously shipped in the Galaxy Note 4 Exynos.

The CPU side of Exynos 5433 is a quad core Cortex A57 cluster with a max frequency of 1.9GHz, and a quad core Cortex A53 cluster with a max frequency of 1.3GHz. The GPU is ARM's Mali-T760 MP6 GPU with a max frequency of 700MHz. On average the results should be similar to the Galaxy Note 4 Exynos, although software improvements to both the browser as well as Android itself will obviously have an impact.

As always, the first group of tests are our web browser tests to characterize JavaScript performance, followed by BaseMark OS II and PCMark to evaluate the CPU and other aspects of a device's performance.

Kraken 1.1 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

Google Octane v2  (Chrome/Safari/IE)

WebXPRT 2013 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

WebXPRT 2015 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

Android, and most specifically Chrome's lackluster JavaScript performance is something we've been commenting on for a while now. On top of that, the Galaxy Tab S2 simply doesn't have Samsung's latest and greatest SoC, and these factors combined together give results that aren't very impressive when one considers how much better the iPad Air 2 performs despite being over one year old at this point.

Galaxy Tab S2 Stock Browser vs Chrome

Looking at the Javascript performance in Samsung's stock browser provides some interesting but not unexpected data. It's clear that there's a much higher degree of optimization for Samsung's SoCs in their own browser than in Chrome, which isn't surprising. However, Samsung's browser isn't without its own issues. It actually crashes in the zlib test of Google Octane, and although the incomplete score of 7354 is higher than what Chrome achieves, the fact that the JavaScript code couldn't be properly executed points to some more concerning issues than performance

The other problem with using a device's stock browser for comparisons is that Android devices shipping with Google Mobile Services also include Chrome, and in my experience users are far more likely to utilize Chrome based on their awareness of the Chrome brand than they are to use the included OEM web browser. In short, while stock browser results may give a better idea of what kind of JavaScript performance a device is technically capable of, the Chrome results are more relevant when examining the performance and experience that the average user will have.

Basemark OS II 2.0 - System

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Memory

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Graphics

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Web

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Overall

When examining the overall score in BaseMark OS II one may think that the Tab S2 performs extremely poorly. However, when looking at the sub tests it becomes clear that the overall score is being brought down by very low storage and graphics scores. What's surprising is the large gap between the graphics resuIts on the Tab S2 and the Galaxy Note 4 Exynos which uses the same Exynos 5433 SoC. I re-ran the benchmark several times to see if there was anything strange going on but there doesn't appear to be any problem with the testing, and I'm not quite sure why there's such a large gap between the two.

Moving past storage and graphics, the Tab S2 gets fairly good scores in the web and system tests. However, it still lags very far behind the iPad Air 2, and there's really no way to excuse this when both devices cost the exact same amount.

PCMark - Web Browsing

PCMark - Video Playback

PCMark - Writing

PCMark - Photo Editing

PCMark - Work Performance Overall

PCMark is still an Android only benchmark so the results here will strictly be comparing to other Android tablets. Overall, the Tab S2 does well. Upon examining the sub tests it can be seen that the Tab S2 is always fairly close the top of the charts, with certain devices achieving extraordinary scores in some tests which makes the Tab S2 look comparatively slower than it would be with more devices for comparison.

Exynos 5433 is not Samsung's best silicon, and even Exynos 7420 would likely struggle to compete with an SoC designed exclusively for full sized tablets. In the end the Tab S2's performance is just not competitive with the iPad Air 2 or even the Nexus 9 which is priced at $399 and often sells for even less. If I were looking at the 8" Tab S2 I would probably consider its performance acceptable relative to the competition at that size and price, but the market segment of full sized flagship tablets costing $500 or more is a completely other story.

I think Samsung definitely needs to reconsider their process of designing tablets, and part of that has to involve using chips that befit the larger size and greater capabilities of a tablet compared to a smartphone. It's in everyone's best interest to not have one company holding an enormous performance lead in any market, and if there's any company that has the capabilities, integration, and resources to fight with Apple over the tablet performance crown I would think it would be Samsung.

Intro and Design System Performance Cont'd: GPU and NAND
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  • minimalz - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    I had both the Air 2 and 9.7 S2 for a few days. I do a lot of reading and iPad Air 2 screen looks way better for that purpose. Easy on the eyes and sharp. The 9.7 S2 didn't feel as comfortable and the weird pink/purple tint color shift on white backgrounds was a deal breaker, too distracting. Although if I was just using it to consume media, I probably would have kept it. Strange the reviewer didn't notice this, I went to several bestbuy's and they all have the same tint issue.
  • DigitalFreak - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    LOL @ everyone trying to justify their tablet purchase to other people. If it works for you, who cares what someone else thinks.
  • nerd1 - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    I don't get the negatives. Tablet is a media consumption device, and they have frigging AMOLED screen with infinite contrast and now daylight visibility as well. Yes AP is slower but who cares? It feels snappy, has enough ram to not refresh like crazy during web surfing, and looks awesome. And nothing beats a good micro SD card slot for media consumption.

    And this tablet is considerably thinner and lighter than even ipad air, actually 9.7" model is almost as light as iPad mini and 8" model is approaching the weight of iPhone 6s+ (192gr vs 250gr, AFAIK) which matters a lot for e-book usage.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    The idea that a tablet can only be a media consumption device is quite a narrow view. But even if that was true, are games not a form of media? The Tab S2 isn't going to play 3D games with anywhere near the same frame rate or level of visual fidelity as the Air 2.
  • nerd1 - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    Why is it a narrow view? I need proper keyboard, pointing device and full OS to get anything done in efficiency. I need powerful GPU and good input methods to play the latest games. I have a laptop with powerful CPU, GPU, lots of storage for exactly that purpose.

    3D gaming in tablet? Seriously? You can get older PC 3D games for a few bucks, and that is magnitude better than any games on tablet. Oh and they don't have in-app purchase either.
  • lilmoe - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    +1
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    The number of self references in your comment demonstrates exactly why it's a narrow view. Your requirements to complete a given task do not apply to every other person.
  • osxandwindows - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    @nerd1
    that battery life tho
  • GMR73 - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    Good review as always. One point though, on your intro page you have the Exynos 5420 as a Cortex-A53 instead of A7
  • nirolf - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    Why would I get this when the original Air is cheaper and pretty much better in any way?

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