QUOTE(stevenyii84 @ Oct 13 2015, 08:24 AM)
how to check the iphone chipset bro ? Hope Malaysia batch is TSMC chip.
For all those hoping for one chip or another,
QUOTE
Ars Technica has now conducted controlled battery life tests on two iPhone 6s models, one with a TSMC chip and one with a Samsung chip, and its findings line up with Apple's statement. The site used two AT&T models, both with SIM cards removed and screen brightness set at the exact same level.
So there are definitely circumstances under which the TSMC phone will last longer than the Samsung phone, but it's not a universal problem. A Samsung chip that's mostly idling or even one under modest CPU and GPU load, though, is going to behave in just about the same way as a TSMC chip. And the kinds of CPU-intensive work that the Samsung chip seems to struggle with just aren't that common on smartphones. Most of the time, iPhone 6S battery life should be similar no matter which chip your phone is using.
In real world testing, there is no heaven and earth like difference here.
Just minor/slight differences.
So, as said before here and everywhere else, it really doesn't matter which chip you get because,
a. there is no way of predicting which you gonna get, and
b. if you do get the undesired chip, there is nothing much you can do about it.