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Windows Vista System Performance Reports
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Well, that article was more for fun since it was indeed based on a beta operating system. I noted there that when the RTM became available, I would revisit all of the benchmarks mentioned there and come up with a more appropriate conclusion. I received a lot of criticism for that article, but most people didn't seem to see the "Beta 2" in the title. I was completely aware that the performance seen there did not reflect the actual performance differences in the final release. I will admit one thing, the RTM is -far- superior to Beta 2... there is no comparison. I have been using Vista Ultimate RTM full time on my Windows rig for over two months and haven't run into any serious problems, except for a few of my favorite applications that still do not function. I've found the system to be much more stable overall and speedier as well. It still has lingering issues, but I mention most of those in my rant article from this past Tuesday. Back to performance. This article will not go into depth like the other one did. In fact, it will be split into two articles. There is a gaming performance article on the way, but we are still awaiting final drivers from NVIDIA before proceeding with it. Testing Overview & Methodology For our performance testing today, I will be using my Intel dual-core rig. The goal of the article is to show the direct performance decrease you will experience when making the move. Take note though, that the difference on your system may vary from my results, especially if you are using an older machine. I chose to use a "midstream" PC to benchmark with, as most people reading this may have a similar setup. If you use a computer that's more than 2 years old, with a small GPU or one that has only 1GB of ram, you can expect Vista to not run that seamlessly. I will be comparing the performance from a freshly formatted machine with both an XP Professional and Vista Ultimate installation. I will be using a variety of synthetic benchmarks and also real world benchmarks that touch on multi-media tasks. All tests are performed on machines that are -not- altered for the best performance. Normally when we benchmark memory or a CPU, we disable many services and close needless programs before doing so. This will not be done here, as realistically, this is not what people do prior to crunching a video file or playing a game. No post-install third party applications will be left running though... just default system services.
Throughout all of these charts, you will see many deltas. These symbolize the advantage or disadvantage Vista Ultimate has over XP. SANDRA 2007 First up is SANDRA, one of my favorite benchmarks.
Cinebench, Sciencemark, 3D Mark 06 The same goes for here with Cinebench, but I started to see even larger differences with Sciencemark where the delta was closer to 3.5%. Super Pi also proved 19 seconds slower under Vista.
Hard Drive Benchmarks Overall with the disk access benchmarks, the only tests that had a rather large differences was with the burst and minimum speed tests. In both HD Tach and HD Tune, the Avg. MB/s proved no different at all, which is good to see.
Real World Benchmarks For some light real world testing, I chose a few programs to conduct multi-media recoding. For Sony Vegas, I took a 50MB .divx file, recoded it to a high-definition profile and added a watermark. For Nero Record, I took a DVD from Volume 4 of the Family Guy collection and recoded it to fit on a backup sized DVD (4.5GB). Lastly, for LAME, I first ripped Voodoo & Serano: Cold Blood to a single .WAV file. Then I ran than through a "lame -b 320 vns.wav" command.
Final Thoughts I don't necessarily recommend Vista to anyone at this point in time, simply because it's not needed. In the two months that I've been using it full time on my Windows machine, I've run into too many weird bugs that I would have liked to have avoided. This ranges from applications not working, quirky UI glitches or hardware drivers not working as well as they should. That aside though, it's no secret that many out there are dying to install it on their system, which is fine. As we have seen from the performance results above, should you stick with XP to save on performance? Hardly... there was not much of a difference between XP and Vista overall, I'm actually quite impressed. As I mentioned earlier though, if you run an older machine, you probably will see a greater slowdown than I did. My test rig consisted of a nice processor, midstream GPU and 2GB of ram. If you run a last-gen CPU, low-end GPU and 1GB of ram, chances are good that you will have a sluggish running system. What should you take away from this article? The fact that Vista actually isn't -that- bad performance wise, if you have a decent machine. It's leaps and bounds above the performance I saw in Beta 2, so I have no major complaints. In the months to come, companies should be continually releasing more Vista-friendly drivers, so the stability/performance side of things should get even better. This is the fourth article in our Vista series this week. The fifth article was to be published tomorrow, but that's pending on NVIDIAs release of an updated driver. As it stands, the current Vista drivers floating around still have some bigger issues. Once we get our hands on the final drivers, you can expect an in-depth look at gaming performance shortly afterwards. In the meantime, be sure to read through our other Vista content from earlier this week. |
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