General Performance - SYSMark 2007:

After years of waiting we can finally move away from SYSMark 2004 as BAPCo has just released SYSMark 2007, its latest benchmark suite that boasts full Vista compatibility (only 32-bit however). As always, SYSMark is divided into a number of individual performance categories, which together provide an overall performance score for the system.

SYSMark 2007 Overall Performance



Remember that the Santa Rosa platform has a CPU that runs at a slightly higher clock speed (2.87% faster), so some of the performance advantage we're seeing here is simply due to the higher clock speed. Even if you don't take that into account, the new platform offers at best a less than 4% advantage over its predecessor. As we mentioned earlier, unlike previous Centrino updates, Santa Rosa isn't about an increase in CPU performance.

General Performance - WorldBench 6 Beta 2:

The latest version of WorldBench also boasts Vista support with a much needed update to the benchmark's application suite.

WorldBench 6 Beta 2 Overall Performance



We see the same sort of performance advantage here as we did in SYSMark 2007, there's a slight edge to Santa Rosa but nothing tremendous as you'd expect.

Test Setup Media Encoding Performance
Comments Locked

22 Comments

View All Comments

  • Cat - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    I thought Santa Rosa was going to have a low-power display mode that effectively used interlacing. Did I just imagine this?
  • IntelUser2000 - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    quote:

    I thought Santa Rosa was going to have a low-power display mode that effectively used interlacing. Did I just imagine this?


    Yea, LCD's twist pixel(something like that) to refresh screen, but on apps that doesn't require high refresh(like word for example) it'll lower the twisting rate.

    Though I don't know if its in the system AT reviewed. I think this is probably the worst review Anand himself ever did.
  • mongoosesRawesome - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    I've read that the Santa Rosa CPU's can shut down one core in single threaded applications and overclock the other core in order to increase performance, all while maintaining the same thermal envelope.

    How much overclocking are we talking about? Is the performance increase tangible? Can you test this?

    Does one core shut down in idle mode anyways?
  • IntelUser2000 - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    quote:

    I've read that the Santa Rosa CPU's can shut down one core in single threaded applications and overclock the other core in order to increase performance, all while maintaining the same thermal envelope.

    How much overclocking are we talking about? Is the performance increase tangible? Can you test this?

    Does one core shut down in idle mode anyways?


    It clocks one speed bin higher(eg. 2.4 to 2.6GHz) when one core is idle(single threaded apps) and is available on non-extreme Core 2 Duo mobile processors.
  • coolme - Wednesday, May 16, 2007 - link

    Can you provide more specifics? What exactly does it do? Increase bus speed? or increase multiplier? When exactly does the process kick in? Possible benchmarks?
  • retrospooty - Wednesday, May 9, 2007 - link

    that with all the hype about the flash memory dramatically improving speed, that Intel would allow pre-release benchmarking to be done without at least a solid explanation as to why it isn't any faster. I wonder whats up with that.
  • Freddo - Wednesday, May 9, 2007 - link

    In the CPU table on the 2nd page, what exactly is the Median Average Power value? How many watt the CPU use while it's on idle doing "nothing" and the OS is on?

    1W is very little, which is nice, and would give long battery times if one keep doing things that doesn't require much CPU power, like simple stuff in Word, Excel and so on.

    If that's the case, the difference between the T and L series is much smaller than I expected too, considering the L CPUs have a noticeably lower TDP.

    Or am I totally off the hook here?
  • IntelUser2000 - Wednesday, May 9, 2007 - link

    quote:

    In the CPU table on the 2nd page, what exactly is the Median Average Power value? How many watt the CPU use while it's on idle doing "nothing" and the OS is on?


    Yea, you got the general idea of it. Intel isn't specific about it either. It's pretty ambigous claim. It's usually quoted as: "Average power consumption while doing typical tasks" or "Average power consumption while running mobilemark to simulate typical tasks". I'd guess it is office stuff like Word.

    The Core 2 Duo chips on the Santa Rosa platform has enhanced deeper sleep power of 1.2W and the LV editions are 0.8W. I'd guess that's pretty close to what they are claiming. The more important power consumption figures are the ones in HFM/LFM mode. Santa Rosa platform adds Super LFM, and reduces TDP at that level significantly. This POS adobe reader won't load so I can't quote the figures, but the numbers are quite lower than the one based on Napa.
  • Freddo - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    Thanks for the info :)
  • fehu - Wednesday, May 9, 2007 - link

    Maybe this tecnology start working when vista know what are the most common used file and preload them on the robson module

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now