MacWorld's iMac Core Duo Benchmarks Debunked? 187
madgunde writes "Looks like MacWorld magazine was a little premature in reporting that the new Apple iMac Core Duo doesn't live up to Apple's speed claims. The folks over at MacSpeedZone have done some performance testing of their own that debunks MacWorld's results and shows that the new iMac Core Duo DOES live up to the hype. Not only did the new iMac wipe the floor with the old model in their tests, but using MacWorld's own test methodology would allow MacSpeedZone to conclude that the new Intel iMac is almost as fast as a PowerMac Quad G5. " I see only one way to solve this: Give me one. I'll run WoW on it, and decide.
Jeez, guys... (Score:5, Insightful)
All of these "benchmarks" are true, as far as they go.
Apple's original SPEC benchmarks are "true".
Macworld's "real world" application benchmarks are "true".
And now, MacSpeedZone's further tests of various tasks also are "true".
I mean, obviously the new iMac isn't going to be 2 times faster for everything under the sun. In fact, Jobs even spoke to this fact in the keynote when he directly said that the tests were just for the CPU and that everything else, like disk I/O and other subsystems, weren't all twice as fast, but it was to illustrate the performance (and performance per watt) of the new Core Duo, which is indeed impressive by any measure.
I think it's safe to say that the new iMac running native applications is definitely faster - sometimes up to twice as fast, and sometimes even more - than the iMac it's replacing. And Rosetta is so impressive that while non-native applications will run slower, it's damned good until native versions of those applications come out, too.
And speaking of CmdrTaco's request for a WoW test on the new iMac...
http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2006/1/
"It's fast, fast as in a superlative and not a comparative sense. One wonders why Steve Jobs didn't blow the crowd away with the saturated colors and excessive frame rates of WoW on an iMac. It loaded fast, and when the first character popped up in town, the frame rate never dropped below 60, and this was pretty much going full tilt in the settings."
Re:Jeez, guys... (Score:5, Funny)
Pfft. Do they really need to ask this question?
(Apologies for the obvious fact that I've never played WoW, or the status messages above would look more realistic.)
Re:Jeez, guys... (Score:3, Funny)
Taco: Rough, aren't they [slashdot.org]?
Re:Jeez, guys... (Score:5, Funny)
With over a million zealots hanging on your every word.
Depending on WoW's login server to give a Keynote presentation is not a wise decision.
Re:Jeez, guys... (Score:4, Funny)
Your position in the queue: 1430
Estimated Time: 2 hours 15 minutes
WOW processor use vs graphics card (Score:2)
Watching the processor use graph on my dual 2.0 GHz (first generation) G5, I could turn off one processor and see a minor difference in performance. With both processors running, utilization was about 60% on both at the max.
When I upgraded my G5's video card, I saw enormous advances in how the game played, how many effects I could turn on, an
Re:Jeez, guys... (Score:3)
Two possible slashdot headlines from next week (Score:4, Funny)
OR
Prices for flying pigs drop dramatically as supply increases after Apple products live up to claimed bench marks.
Re:Two possible slashdot headlines from next week (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Two possible slashdot headlines from next week (Score:2, Funny)
Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:5, Interesting)
what i want to know - and what holds me back from moving to an iiMac from my DP g5 1.8 - is
1. how they will perform when rendering with Compressor
2. how much faster is FCP when hooked up to similar disk packs (like cheap desktop FW400 raids)
3. Will i still be able to run background processing tasks like Compressor and handbrake yet get good foreground performance so i can email, websurf and get on with life while waiting for those 30-1 hour long tasks, instead of walking away from the machine, lest i get tempted to use it and really slow down the renders.
4. Will Aperture stop sucking performance wise?
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
With the second core, I imagine it has a decisive advantage for things like this. The reviews I've seen all make a point of saying how responsive the machine is.
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:5, Interesting)
Or to put it another way, I was able to rebuild my darwinports on one CPU and at the same time get better peformance out of Monster Fair (a pinball game) running via Rosetta than I managed at native on my 1ghz 12" PowerBook when I needed to quit every other app on the system on the PowerBook.
A lot of the help is more memory --- 2gb versus 1.25gb on the PowerBook (each system was maxed out) --- but a second core makes a big difference, too. No doubt about it, I'm impressed by system performance. I hadn't thought that Monster Fair would be useable running via Rosetta, let alone faster, let alone faster while compiling software on the other CPU.
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2, Interesting)
Remember that programs which use OS services to perform processor-intensive operations won't spend much time in the actual program code, thus won't be affected much by Rosetta emulation. They become glorified scripts that delegate the real work to the native OS code. It was the same with the switch from 68K to PowerPC in 1994, where many 68K programs ran at
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:5, Informative)
what i want to know - and what holds me back from moving to an iiMac from my DP g5 1.8 - is
In general there's no reason to do so, the iMac Core Duo should be roughly equivalent in speed to a dual G5 system right now. Having the cores on a single chip gives it a slight advantage but the power dissipation aside the G5 is a very efficient chip and matches up well with the new Intel offerings on a clock for clock basis.
The Intel iMacs are not a Power Mac replacement, and shouldn't be considered as such, they bring roughly Power Mac levels of performance to the iMac and Powerbook lines, but do not surpass it.
More specifically...
1. how they will perform when rendering with Compressor
Probably about the same or even in favor of the G5. Compressor's code is highly dependent on the SIMD (SSE or Altivec) unit and the G5's Altivec unit, or the G4's for that matter is generally considered a better SIMD implementation on a general purpose microprocessor than SSE.
2. how much faster is FCP when hooked up to similar disk packs (like cheap desktop FW400 raids)
Again there will probably be no significant difference between the two platforms, since a the Core Duo is roughly twice as fast as the G5 iMac, but so is a dual G5.
3. Will i still be able to run background processing tasks like Compressor and handbrake yet get good foreground performance so i can email, websurf and get on with life while waiting for those 30-1 hour long tasks, instead of walking away from the machine, lest i get tempted to use it and really slow down the renders.
Multitasking performance is as much a function of the operating system's scheduler as the hardware. Again you would see little difference between the two machines. The G5's ability to hold more memory actually gives it a higher level of potential performance when the memory is maxed out than the iMac.
4. Will Aperture stop sucking performance wise?
Short answer, no. Aperture's performance is largely a function of Core Image which depends on the graphics card and system bus moreso than the CPU.
In general if you need an immediate speed upgrade a quad core G5 with a lot of memory is what you should purchase, otherwise wait for the workstation class Intel machines (MacMac? Following the PowerBook -> MacBook convention)
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:3, Interesting)
All I know is that today I used Compressor to turn a 2.5 hour full res quicktime into an mpeg-4. Usually it would be on a dual proc g5 with 4 gigs or ram and it would take almost two hours. On a dual proc xserve hooked up to a RAID 5 xraid via fiber, it took 34 minutes. 34 MINUTES! I was beside myself. I can't wait for my quad core g5 to get in next week so I can see how fast I can encode for the air and for web with that
Re:Nothing settled until Pro Apps... (Score:2)
What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
The article mentions that their logic was flawed, but they don't explain the logic problems with MacWorld's article. After looking at it I can't really seem how they came to the "14% faster" conclusion.
Can anyone else explain this?
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:5, Informative)
The basic problem was that Macworld's benchmarks were not CPU benchmarks and didn't make full use of the second core in the Intel Mac. The '2x' number Apple said was for the CPU --- even SJ mentioned that it doesn't mean apps will be 2x faster since the disks and everything else are the same. This article shows that in cases where the benchmark is CPU bound, the new Intel Mac can be almost twice as fast.
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
"The dual 1.2 GHz Mac was barely 20% faster than the 1 GHz single processor machine...
-or
"According to Apple this dual processor Mac should be smoking this single processor Pentium system, but its barely keeping up..."
Never seeming to understand what happens when a single-threaded benchmark runs on a dual processor/core system.
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2, Informative)
He then doesn't see much of a performance increase when he uses it for whatever he does with it. Will he be satisfied by some Apple PR guy saying "But look! It's not using as much of the CPU as your old Mac! That means it's MUCH faster!"
The average Smoky McPotts Mac freak won't really care if it's using less of the CPU if it still takes as long to d
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, but who really cares about CPU benchmarks?
My 2.6GHz Thinkpad smokes my 1.0GHz G4 iMac in CPU benchmarks. I use them both every day for many hours a day and for many common tasks. However, in spite of the CPU performance difference, the iMac seems faster (i.e. it's more responsive AND my productivity/output is higher).
Now I'm sure that there are some applications (that I never use) where the standard benchmarks do give meaningful results... However, for the applications that I use, I find most benc
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
I find this amazing, because I've always found OS X to be sluggish and unresponsive on anything short of top-end G5s (and even then, it's relatively slow).
My 1Ghz iBook, while usable running Mail and a few tabs in Safari, gets extremely sluggish when asked to do anything more - and this is with
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
People whose apps are CPU-bound? Eg: the SPEC results for the Core Duo are a pretty good indicator of GCC performance. The Core Duo is 3x as fast as the iMac G5 in SPECint, and according to the xcode mailing list, the Core Duo iMac is just a hair slower than a quad. There are lots of apps that are CPU-bound: 3D rendering, many scientific codes, etc. Things like SPEC are a good indicator for the performance of such apps.
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2, Informative)
You missed my point - perhaps I was too subtle.
I challenge your assertion: there are NOT a lot of apps that are cpu bound (or rather, the percentage of apps and users of those apps is a fraction of a fraction of the general population of users). I acknowledge that there are examples where CPU speed is king, but often, even these are limited by memory access and worse still disk access or even worse still network bandwidth... My point is that the legitima
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:3, Informative)
Go to apple.com and there's a picture of an iMac, the tagline below is "2x faster. Twice as amazing."
That clearly gives the impression the machine is 2x faster. The machine isn't going to be twice as amazing if only one small part of it is 2x faster.
The tagline isn't "2x faster processor" ( of course the processor is 2x faster, there's two of them! )
And the picture isn't of the CPU.
here's a link to the pic incase the apple homepage changes
http://images.apple.com/ho [apple.com]
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:5, Insightful)
Test: Compressing and sending a 16MB file over the network
iMac: 83 seconds (cpu usage 23%)
quad: 84 seconds (cpu usage 11%)
Wow! The iMac is faster than the quad! Of course, in reality it was working much harder to accomplish the same task (compressing at a bandwidth-limited speed). The articles point - and it is very poorly written, I will agree - is that this kind of test is crap.
The Macworld test used the same theories in the other direction. After all, if you perform a task that takes the old G5 iMac 20 seconds but uses 99% of its CPU, and takes the new intel iMac 19 seconds but only uses 45% of its total CPU power, I think you'd say that the iMac was more than 5% more powerful, right?
Admittedly if all you ever do is one task at a time, you wouldn't notice the difference. Considering that many people like to do multiple tasks - watching the recent keynote in a background window while doing some other work in a foreground window, for example - this is not an inconsequential point.
That brings up the example from the linked MacSpeedZone article:
Encoding one QuickTime movie:
intel dual core iMac: 97.02 seconds (87% CPU)
g5 quad core powermac: 84.85 seconds (42% CPU)
advantage g5: 14% faster
Encoding two QuickTime movies:
intel dual core iMac: 176.60 seconds (100% CPU)
g5 quad core powermac: 86.25 seconds (87% CPU)
advantage g5: 105% faster
Even that's a little misleading, since the quad still had spare processor bandwidth. This is why a lot of benchmark tests are designed to test each piece separately, spinning them up to 100%. Of course, real world tests are great as well - but only if your usage actually parallels those tests.
How fast does it feel? (Score:3, Insightful)
The OS X seems to be pretty good at spreading the load of multiple programs and the OS across processors. I remember that the dual 450 MHz Macs seemed dramatically snappier that the 800 MHz iBook, even though in most tests the iBook would come out ahead.
Re:How fast does it feel? (Score:2)
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
Re:Now I'm really confused (Score:2)
Well, yes, the quad-core top-of-the-line 2.5ghz G5 is faster than the dual-core consumer-grade 2ghz iMac. This should be expected.
How is the intel iMac mopping up anything when faced with increased parallelism? If anything, shouldn't MacWorld's methodology benefit the new intel iMac's?
Easy - compare it to something other than the quad-core G5. In this example, they're comparing the dual-core intel aga
Re:What was MacWorld's flawed logic? (Score:2)
The problem with the Macworld benchmark is that many of the applications in it are not CPU bound (the disk, the graphics card, or even the CD drive (iTunes rippling) is likely the bottleneck). Other applications do not have enough parallelism to exploit all processing power, so are not using all available
Splitting hairs (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Splitting hairs (Score:2)
If I ran a benchmark that involved modelling it would show no improvement in speed over a single chip machine. If I ran a render test would clock in around 4X faster. Both tests are accurate and simply reflect how the software is designed not how the chips themselves function.
This, of course assumes that the OS uses no CPU time and you are running no other applications. I don't know about you, but I have nine applications running right now and a total of 63 processes. I don't know how many threads. About
Re:Splitting hairs (Score:2)
May be a *NIX thing (Score:2)
We recently got twin cpu boxes as an'upgrade' and have been living with disappointment ever since.
In the many hours that I have spent watching the xload graph and top it is apparent that my main application process is single threaded. HP UNIX seems to be able to be able to correctly run all the other stuff (X and so on) on the other cpu. However, the speed penalty when I try and run two of main apps at once is ridiculous.
OK, I'm out of my depth here...
WoW would be a terrible benchmark... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:WoW would be a terrible benchmark... (Score:2)
Slashdotted (Score:2)
Velocity Engine (Score:5, Funny)
I thought this was the best CPU technology?
Steve Jobs told me I had a super computer when I bought
my G3, G4 and G5.
My PowerPC processors were unique. It made me special. Anyone
can have an Intel processor. Even poor people. How is that exclusive?
I'm an upper middle class elitist snob. Why did Apple take away my bragging rights! Now I'm a technological nobody. I'm plain and boring again. For pete's sake, poor people can even buy IPODS now!!
I want my super computer back! Because I lack a personality and I have no soul what product can help? Please Steve Jobs tell me what to buy to get my soul back. What can I buy so that I feel whole again?
What about a Hybrid car, will that help me?
Re:Velocity Engine (Score:2)
Relax. Calm down. Apple's entire G4 and G5 lineup is still intact, so you can still buy one and have all of that PowerPC and AltiVec goodness while it's still available.
When that is over with, you can do what other x86 haters (like myself) would do if they won the lottery and treat yourself to a Sun notebook [sun.com], or Sun Blade 2500 [sun.com], which I'm pretty sure will get your soul back. Unless you're not a x86 hater and just don't like poor people with Macs, that is....
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Mark parent as troll (was: Re:Velocity Engine) (Score:2)
Caught up to what? SSE-1 + SSE-2, which are the comparable techonologies to Altivec, both shipped *BEFORE* Altivec. Furthermore, anyone who has watched the x86 world to any degree has seen Intel and AMD actually *SLOWING DOWN* lately. They pushed a little too hard on Moore's law during 2001 - 2003, and are having a hard time just keeping up with their own pace. If anything, they are joining the x86 arena during a period of relati
Re:Mark parent as troll (was: Re:Velocity Engine) (Score:2)
Not really. Altivec and SSE were released in the same timeframe in 1999. If you want to talk about "copycat", AMD beat both technologies to market with their 3D-Now! extensions in 1998.
We will ignore MMX because it was clumsy and limited due to the implementation taking over floating-point registers.
Altivec on the G4 was unique in that it had two vector processing pipelines, but the poor bus
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Velocity Engine (Score:2)
Re:Velocity Engine (Score:2)
Definitely. I just got my new Hyundai hybrid and I feel like the cat's ass... though my neighbour with the Prius seems unhappy with me for some reason.
Re:Velocity Engine (Score:4, Funny)
Neuticles.
Re:Velocity Engine (Score:2)
Don't worry, mac users has always been.
Re:What about 64 bit? (Score:2)
The push to 32bit (particularly on x86) was not simply about the word size, it was also the point where MMU's were expected to make a significant improvement. It was where Intel fixed their architecture to the point of actually being usefull. (16bit protected mode is actually kind of ugly.).
I have a 1.6Ghz G5, and sometimes next week I will be receiving a 17" iMac. The processor speed of the new iMac
If it's so fast... (Score:2, Funny)
Who to believe? (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft says their software is secure...
Oracle says their database is hack-proof...
Symantec says their software protects me from hackers...
Re:Who to believe? (Score:2)
I say Santa Claus does exist...
WoW (Score:2)
I know that was obiously a joke, but I'd just like to point out that a good video card and internet connection are much more important than processor speed these days.
Re:WoW (Score:2)
Performance is irrelevant here (Score:2, Insightful)
Consumers care about intel!? (Score:2)
The Apple and brand is far better known amongst non-techy users...
http://www.brandchannel.com/start1.asp?fa_id=298 [brandchannel.com]
I'd bet that intel needs Apple.
Apple are in a good position because they can demand a premium for their products. By switching to the x86 platform they are unlikely to be in a position where they cant offer a premium p
I have both G5 2Ghz and Core Duo 2Ghz iMacs (Score:5, Insightful)
One thing that impressed me was the fact that Rosetta is able to run command line apps compiled for PPC. Gives a good idea of just how fast Rosetta is when running raw PPC code without a GUI. The answer is that a 2Ghz Intel chip running PPC code is about the same speed as a 500Mhz PPC. very reasonable compared with something like PearPC but still a significant drain. You get some back with the GUI as much of that code is native so something like MS Office actually feels usable. Our 2.3Ghz G5 Xserves smoke both the G5 iMac and the Intel even when the Intel is running native code at least with our apps.
So, do I recommend the Intel iMac? Probably. Would I recommend against a G5? Nope. Buy whichever you like. With the G5, you know what you are getting and it will still run software for the forseeable future. The Intel machine is pretty hard work at the moment but has the promise of getting better as more universal apps come along. Of course, there is currently no viable fast PC emulator so you can't run Windows or Linux on it. With Qemu or VPC on the G5 you can run Windows quite reasonably but not as quickly as you will be able to in say, six months when MS get off their arses and build VPC for the Intel Mac.
I can see why Apple released the iMac first, makes sense. The G5 iMac was never really a speed demon so the Intel one doesn't suffer too much overall. Same goes for the MacBook Pro which should be able to keep up with the G4 PowerBooks. It will take a while yet before slotting an Intel chip into the pro towers makes sense though.
A Mac is a Mac though, doesn't really matter what is inside chip wise.
Re:I have both G5 2Ghz and Core Duo 2Ghz iMacs (Score:2)
What an amazing surprise, since Eclipse has always worked [eclipse.org] perfectly [eclipse.org] on under Mac OS X before.
As someone who spends a lot of time in Eclipse, the fact that it's never quite worked right under OS X is the only reason I'm still typing this on a PC running Windows. While it's unfortunate for early adopters like yourself, I'm kind of glad it's altogether broken because perhaps this will force Apple to pay more attention to the issu
Re:better data (Score:2)
I have a Quad, and the laptop is comin. I plan to test single cpus and compare them; but you are in better shape since you have a 2Ghz G5 to compare with. Some CLI bench marks would be nice; but i'd like to see some comparisons between chips at the same speed that are more cpu bound.
Isn't anybody interested in comparisons between processors? Years of G4/G5 hype and now it
WoW on intel iMac (Score:2, Informative)
One of my guildmates just got her one up and going last night, Running WoW under rosetta. It wasn't actually a comprehensive test, but here comment was "Wow I'm in orgrimar and not lagging". So I'm guessing at default settings it's OK.
Performance should improve when bliz relases 1.9.3 and she dosn't have to use rosetta anymore.
-Qyiet
Do people really do this?? (Score:3, Funny)
I know apple users have a reputation for following fads, but I hope people don't rush out and by a new iMac every time they do a CPU upgrade (not even a new form factor!), please tell me they don't!!
Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
(*) Yes, I know that for PowerPC and Intel of the *same clockrate* PowerPC is generally 25-30% faster, the problem is PowerPC's perpetual lower clockrates. Brute force may not be elegant but it can prevail.
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
This is actually *NOT TRUE*, and your repetition of it is testimony to the effectiveness of Jobs' reality distortion field. Especially the latest generation of PowerPCs -- Athlon/Opteron and now the new Pentium-M based CPUs all have tremendously highly *PER CLOCK* performance (this due in large part to IBM's decision to go with 2-cycle latency integer i
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
Or perhaps you are having trouble with the word "generally" and didn't catch the clue that "Same story, year after year after year" indicates I am not discussing only the latest and greatest CPUs. I'm actually going back all the way to 603/604 days. Anyway, thanks for the laugh. I'm usually getting flamed by the RDF'd Mac advocates for spreading the heresy that PowerMac are only mar
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
Its been true since the Athlon/Pentium III days. Before that there were no benchmarks on the Power PC at all (you're not going to bring up ByteMark are you?), and thus you have no basis at all to make such a claim.
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
I did try ByteMark when Apple used it as a basis for it's claims, as I did with their other basis during other advertising campaigns over the years. When x86 ByteMark was compiled with a current compiler with appropriate settings the PowerPC improvements were far less dramatic than when Apple u
Re:Dupe: PowerPC benchmark flawed, Intel faster (Score:2)
And did you try ByteMark with a compiler built specifically for winning that benchmark on the x86? (Like the Intel Compiler?) Remember Ap
Enough Benchmarks Already (Score:2)
Here is a quick summary of the benchmark articles (10 or so) I read this week.
- PowerPC Application that are not universal binaries will run faster on a G5 than CoreDuo. Well DUH, they have to be translated through Rosetta first!!
- Universal Apllication show slighly better performance for single thread apps and higher performance for multithreaded applications on CoreDuo. Again duh, I would expect a dual core system to outperform a single core system.
- Macs still suck at games but in all fairness, they w
Just watch the damn video (Score:2, Interesting)
The Intel iMac flat out smokes the G5 iMac. It's not even close.
Re:Just watch the damn video (Score:2)
What Apple's claims really mean... (Score:2)
Or, considering Apple used to claim old Macs were twice as fast as Intel PCs, if the new (Intel-based) Macs are twice as fast as those, this means Intel CPUs are four times as
Re:What Apple's claims really mean... (Score:2)
No, what they are really saying is the old Macs ran at half the speed of a PC with a dual core processor. But let's not get little details get in the way of a good self-congratulatory rant...
Re:What Apple's claims really mean... (Score:2)
From TFA: (Score:2)
What the f*ck?
If I'm not mistaken, this paragraph says that "To use multiprocessor machines efficiently, you must plan your usage for maximum eff
Re:From TFA: (Score:2)
Now, suppose you decide to compress that movie you downloaded off bittorrent... I mean ripped off the DVD you bought... and then, rather than sitting there staring at it waiting to finish you went off and did something else... maybe WATCHED a quicktime video. Oh, and Mail decided to check your e-mail and had to do some spam filtering. Maybe you've
A good comparative benchmark (Score:2)
That'd help demonstrate the advantage of the second core, in a more real-world manner than SPECMark tests.
Re:A good comparative benchmark (Score:2)
Oh, um, that's what they did to debunk MacWorld's test.
Nevermind.
it just occurred to me (Score:2, Interesting)
Intel wanted in, because long term, Apple was a threat. (AMD is a short term threat) If OSX were to take off on somebody else's processor, well, that's somebody else's processor (that they can't build) selling, and Bill Gates would compile Windows in a heartbeat to run on that processor too. He's done it before for less. So Intel offers Apple everything; all you can eat chips, cheap, deliv
Rofl... (Score:2)
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:5, Funny)
most of it goes to NPC salaries. [/deadpan]
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
Hers:
PowerMac G4 Dual 867mhz 1.25gb ram ATI Radeon 9800 AGP 4x 128mb (aftermarket) 160gb IDE hdd (upgraded) OSX 10.4.4
Mine:
Dell Precision 650 dual xeon 2.0ghz 1gb ECC ram ATI AIW 9600 xt 128mb AGP 8x U160 SCSI 73gb seagate hdd Windows XP Pro SP2 + all
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
I'd be careful what I called POS if I were the one getting 1000ms pings.
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
Systems specs don't have any bearing on 'lag' (Score:2)
The reference was to the performance of the system, the performance of a system (good or bad) has nothing to do with lag.
The slang term 'lag', in the context of on line gaming, refers purely to the delay on the network (and/or the server in processing player movement and actions). There has been a trend in the last couple of years or so to confuse this with poor client side p
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
Lag can manifest itself as stuttering in certain situations. When you're looking at an MMORPG, there's tons of low-latency requirement issues to look at. Your position, and the positions of everything around you are constantly being sent to your gaming client. So, if you're not getting data quickly enough, of course your game's going to be "slow".
Re:WoW not such a good benchmarking program... (Score:2)
Re:that's all very nice.. (Score:2)
So I'm much more interested in Windows non-emulators like WINE.
Re:Biased even for slashdot. (Score:2)
There's 2 conflicting reports, so automatically the one that makes the new macs sound bad is a premature that needs to be debunked, and the one that makes the new macs sound good is right and does that debunking.
Gee don't bother to RTFA or anything. It specifically addresses the previous report's results and why they are not a good sampling (mostly disk bound not processor). The summary does not even say the old report is wrong is says it may have been premature. From now on please at least read the art
Re:Biased even for slashdot. (Score:2)
1.) MacWorld puts out benchmarks
2.) Someone points out the benchmarks are flawed
3.) Where's the bias?
The last Slashdot article screamed with a headline about "not living up to the hype" regarding Apple's benchmarks, and all the posters made Steve Jobs reality-distortion-field jokes, so i