The delisted phones include the P20, P20 Pro, Nova 3, and Honor Play. Huawei admitted to this behavior in a statement given to Android Authority, saying that its phones are designed to adjust their performance based on the app that’s running.
But the way that Huawei implemented that behavior isn’t allowed. While phones can adjust their performance as part of their typical behavior under high workloads, they can’t be hard coded to maximize their behavior just because a specific benchmark app is running. That’s what Huawei seems to have done, according to UL, which is behind the 3DMark software.
When UL ran an internal version of 3DMark, which Huawei’s phones couldn’t recognize the name of, the phones performed worse in the test. That indicated that the phones weren’t actually smart enough to identify high performance demands on their own, which meant the benchmark score wasn’t an accurate reflection of how the phone would handle a typical app without special attention from Huawei.
As punishment, 3DMark has removed these phones’ rankings from its leaderboard and adorned their listings on its website with a note that the phone’s “manufacturer has not complied with UL benchmark rules.” Many of their results have been removed as well.
Huawei is far from the first company to get caught toying with benchmark results. Samsung got busted for the same behavior on its flagship phones in 2013, and just last year, OnePlus was found to have done the same. This timing is particularly unfortunate for Huawei, since just weeks ago it got caught trying to pass off a DSLR photo as a photo from one of its phones.
What’s funny about all of this is that benchmarks don’t really matter that much. Tweaking a phone to optimize benchmark apps might produce some numbers that make a small subset of nerds drool, but those numbers don’t correlate to the actual experience of using the phone. They might speak to how well the phone performs under heavy stress, like while gaming, but a better test is to just play a game with it and find out what happens.
Huawei even admits this. In its statement, the company said it “always prioritizes the user experience rather than pursuing high benchmark scores — especially since there isn’t a direct connection between smartphone benchmarks and user experiences.” And yet, it still coded its phone to deliver higher performance when running a benchmark test.
But Huawei also claims that its phones’ include AI that’s smart enough to optimize performance based on whatever app is running, and clearly that’s not the case. If it were, then boosting performance for benchmarks would be fair game — but as it is, it’s not a true reflection of how the phone performs in demanding situations.
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Huawei caught cheating benchmark test for P20
Reviewed by ONYONG PRECIOUS
on
September 07, 2018
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When Apple announced the iPad Pro at the end of last year, it raised a few questions. After years of dismissing hybrid devices like Microsoft's successful Surface line, the launch of the 12.9-inch iPad Pro — complete with keyboard and pen attachments — was the kind of reversal that a politician would be proud of. Nonetheless, the iPad Pro was well-received, and Apple quickly followed up with a second model, this time with a smaller 9.7-inch display to compete with the more consumer-oriented iPad Air 2.
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