Overall System Performance - SYSMark 2007

SYSMark 2007 is an application benchmark suite that plays back real world usage scenarios in four categories (E-Learning, Video Creation, Productivity and 3D), using the following applications:

Adobe After Effects 7
Adobe Illustrator CS2
Adobe Photoshop CS2
AutoDesk 3ds Max 8
Macromedia Flash 8
Microsoft Excel 2003
Microsoft Outlook 2003
Microsoft PowerPoint 2003
Microsoft Word 2003
Microsoft Project 2003
Microsoft Windows Media Encoder 9 series
Sony Vegas 7
SketchUp 5
WinZip 10.0

Performance is measured in each individual category and then an overall score is reported.

SYSMark 2007 - Overall

AMD's Phenom continues to suffer under SYSMark, looking at overall system performance - Intel's Core 2 lineup is just stronger. The fastest triple-core CPU is on par with Intel's $133 dual-core E4700. It's also worth mentioning that the triple-core Phenom CPUs are barely any faster than the higher clocked, dual-core Athlon X2s.

Also pay close attention to the Core 2 Duo E7200, this little beauty manages to offer better performance than the E6550 despite having a slightly smaller L2 cache and slower FSB (3MB vs. 4MB and 1066MHz vs. 1333MHz).

SYSMark 2007 - E-Learning

The E-Learning suite mostly echoes what we saw in the overall SYSMark results.

SYSMark 2007 - Video Creation

The Video Creation tests have the triple-core Phenom X3 far more competitive, the fastest entry in the chart is actually the Phenom X4 9750.

SYSMark 2007 - Productivity

The last two test suites show results in-line with what we've already seen under SYSMark: AMD's Phenom wasnt particularly speedy with four cores, and disabling one of them doesn't help any.

SYSMark 2007 - 3D

The Test 3D Rendering Performance
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  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    I've seen nothing to suggest a faster HyperTransport bus would help AMD much. You need to compare at the same CPU speed; if you raise the HT bus to 250 MHz that represents a 25% overclock of the CPU as well, so of course it helps performance a lot. Try comparing:

    Athlon X2 4600+ 2.4GHz
    Run at 200 HTT and 12X CPU vs. 240 HTT and 10X CPU

    Athlon X2 4800+ 2.5GHz
    Run at 200 HTT and 12.5X CPU vs. 250 HTT and 10X CPU
    (Note: the 12.5X multiplier vs. 10X may have an impact - half multipliers may not perform optimally.)

    Athlon X2 5000+ 2.6GHz
    Run at 200 HTT and 13X CPU vs. 260 HTT and 10X CPU

    Now, the one thing you'll also have to account for is memory performance. At default settings (i.e. DDR2-800), you get different true memory speeds. The 12X CPU will end up at a true DDR2-800; the 12.5X will end up at DDR2-714 (CPU/7 yields 357MHz base memory speed); the 13X will result in DDR2-742 (again, CPU/7 yields 371 MHz base memory speed). For the "overclocked HT bus" setups, you'll need to select the same memory dividers to get apples-to-apples comparisons, which depending on motherboard may not be possible.

    Unless you can do all of the above, you cannot actually make any claims that HyperTransport bus speeds are the limiting factor. I imagine you may see a small performance boost from a faster HT bus with everything else staying the same, but I doubt it will be more than ~3% (if that). HT bus only communicates with the Northbridge (chipset), and the amount of traffic going through that link is not all that high. Remember, on Intel that link to the chipset also has to handle memory traffic; not so on AMD platforms.
  • ghitz - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    The e8400 performance/power usage is outstanding and will be great value once the G45 boards trickle in. I can't wait for those G45s!
  • ap90033 - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    So AMD STILL hadnt caught up. Thanks Good to know. Not that Im suprised....
  • natebsi - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    The bottomline is: AMD's newest CPU's are bested in nearly every single benchmark by an Intel CPU thats been out like, what, a year?

    I have no love/hate relationship with either Intel or AMD, but thats just sad. I predict many more losing quarters for them, though I don't know how many more they can take...
  • Griswold - Thursday, April 24, 2008 - link

    Thanks for that null-posting.
  • najames - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    As a long time AMD only user, I just bought an Intel Q6600 on impusle from Frys.com for only $180. I was looking at a 780G solution and thought, I'll get the Intel quad and a similar Intel based solution for doing video processing work. Oops, I found out the only current Intel mATX is the G35 is from Asus, ONE BOARD, huge selection to choose from huh?

    I'll either sell/return the unopened CPU or buy a P35 board and graphics card. I could deal with a slightly slower AMD 9550 CPU and a better platform instead, tough choice.
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    I needed parts for a new system for the lab last week, I went with the non-integrated graphics and add-on card. Integrated graphics would have been fine for the application, but when the board plus card cost less than the ASUS G35 board (and are full-size ATX as well, which is useful) then the decision wasn't too hard.
  • Staples - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    Intel graphics have always been terrible. AMD definitely has the advantage for integrated graphics and even know their CPUs can not compete, I still find myself considering one just for their graphic options. I am glad that this review points it out bringing to light that Intel graphics are just not acceptable. Whether Intel will change is a big unknown, probably not.

    I find the added emphasis over the last year of power consumption a great one. With the price of energy these days, it is something I factor into my purchase. SSE4 and a lower power consumption is the reason I am holding out for a Q9450. Hopefully by the time it actually goes into mass production (hopefully in the next two months), a decent integrated option will be out for the platform.
  • 0roo0roo - Thursday, April 24, 2008 - link

    terrible? i used an intel 950 integrated graphics with some 1080p content, it decoded just fine with an e2200.
  • derek85 - Thursday, April 24, 2008 - link

    Terrible? Yes, terrible. Besides the lame hardware they can't even write proper drivers, see how many randering problems they have in the games.

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