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
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  • avaughan - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    I would have thought that the real benefit from Robson would have been the power savings from the ability for the OS to write to
    disk/save something/do a small amount of swapping without needing to spin up the hard disk.

    Regarding performance expectations, what's the read/write throughput on the flash, and is this a fast hard disk? I would expect
    reading/writing a large contiguous file to/from a fast hard to be faster than reading/writing to cheap (= slow) flash.

    If Vista can store part of the data on the hard disk, and the rest on flash, and read/write both chunks simultaneously
    or the flash has throughput as fast/faster as the hard disk then I would hope to see performance benefits.
  • smn198 - Thursday, May 10, 2007 - link

    Maybe it was an interesting article but I cannot read the begining of each line as there are Intel vPro dogs in the way.

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