Media Encoding Performance

Although DivX was one of the first areas we saw performance gains with when moving to 64-bit years ago, our codec and encoding front end are both still 32-bit applications.  We've moved to DivX 6.5.1 but our test settings remain the same.  We use the codec in its unconstrained profile, using a quality present of 5 in 1-pass mode.  Enhanced multithreading is enabled and we report encoding frame rate for our 1080p source file.

DivX 6.5.1 w/ Xmpeg 5.0.3  

The Core 2 Duo E6700, the closest price competitor to the X2 6000+, delivers significantly better performance in our DivX test.  The Core 2's 22% performance advantage more than makes up for its $70 price premium.  The E6600 continues the trend by offering better performance at an even closer price to the Athlon 64 X2 5600+.  The same is true for the E6400 and the X2 5000+, the clear win goes to the Core 2 processor even when you take into account price. 

Windows Media Encoder is available in a 64-bit version and thus we used that here as one of our encoding tests.  Our test remains the same as we've run it in the past, only using the 64-bit version of WME instead of the 32-bit version.  Performance is reported in frames encoded per second:

Windows Media Encoder 9 64-bit  

The performance advantages aren't nearly as high as they are under DivX, but our WME tests agree with what we just saw.  At equal or similar price points, the Core 2 Duo is a much better performer than the Athlon 64 X2.  We've known this to be true ever since the Core 2 launch, but we're re-affirming it after the last round of price cuts. 

We also looked at encode time using Windows Movie Maker, a 64-bit application that comes with Windows Vista.  We measured the time it took to encode content recorded off of Media Center into a format for posting on YouTube.  Encode time was measured in seconds:

Windows Movie Maker 64-bit  

Performance under Windows Movie Maker falls somewhere in between what we saw with DivX and WME; the Core 2 family gets the clean win here. 

H.264 encoded content is still not mainstream yet, but the benefits of storing your content in the new format are numerous.  We measured H.264 encode performance using Quicktime and report the results in frames encoded per second:

Quicktime 7.1 (H.264)  

The tables turn a bit under Quicktime, with the Athlon 64 X2 6000+ actually coming out on top.  The 5600+ also manages to outperform the E6600 and the 5000+ is faster than the E6400.  The results here are a bit different than under Windows XP, but we're unsure of whether that is due to Vista or the 64-bit version of Vista. 

We conclude our look at Media Encoding performance with a simple conversion from a 304MB wav file to a 192kbps MP3 using iTunes.  The conversion rate is reported in MB/s:

iTunes  

MP3 encoding performance shifts the balance once again over to Intel; the E6700, E6600 and E6400 each hold an advantage over their respective AMD counterparts.

General Performance 3D Rendering Performance
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  • Roy2001 - Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - link

    Trouble with 965P? That's rare case. 1st time to me actually. My DS3+E6600 system has yet to give me trouble. My old Athlon systems, both desktop and laptop, do not work very well with USB/PCI wifi card. Laptop need to boot/wake without wifi card inserted and desktop will lost connection once every day.

    I am not an fanboy, I am just stating the fact. As you can see, I have more AMD systems than Intel system.
  • johnsonx - Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - link

    Your wifi card problems were far more likely due to the drivers, and possibly the cards themselves, than due to the AMD platform. I've seen both of those problems on all manner of systems, both AMD and Intel. Besides, it just isn't the type of problem I would hang on the platform.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - link

    P965 at launch was really quite flaky. Many people (me among them) had memory compatibility problems, and not just with elite memory. The BIOS updates have now pretty much fixed any problems, but some of those updates took 2-3 months after launch to fix all of the important stuff (depending on motherboard). And let's not even get into the "DirectX 9" G965 fiasco... I think we're still waiting on drivers that are even remotely able to run DX9 content, and it's still slow at that.
  • Thatguy97 - Thursday, June 18, 2015 - link

    man i bought myself a couple x2s after the price cuts back then still used a core 2 duo e6600 as a primary but they were so cheap i couldnt help myself had to get a 5600+

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