Gaming: DX10

For our look at DX10, we have taken cards from both AMD and NVIDIA, and run them through some of the DX10 titles in our test suite. As we're using different cards with different levels of performance, all results are reported as normalized to Vista, rather than as raw framerates.

The short story here is that there is no story. While Vista brought about DX10 and a massive driver architecture change, Win7 does not bring such a change, which also brings about little chance for a performance difference since they share common drivers. Given that, since we're GPU limited so often, Win7 isn't able to help matters. The biggest difference is for our lowest-end cards, the GT 220 and HD 4670, and this is a product of lower framerates producing slightly more variable results when reported in terms of percentages.

Notably, all of our cards do consistently outperform Vista when running under Win7 (if it was truly experimental variation, it would average out to 1) but only by the slimmest of margins. Even for the Radeon HD 5000 series, which enjoys a slightly larger margin, is still close enough that this is a wash. Windows 7 doesn't have a significant impact on gaming performance.

Gaming: DX9 Laptop Performance
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  • jay401 - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    awesome, thanks for the update!
  • MadAd - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    I must have missed that in the feature list- how stupid.

    6 years of incoming and sent mail history in OE and MS are forcing me to consider alternatives such as thunderbird by not including one.

    What strange marketing ideas they have.
  • BPB - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    Why is downloading it for free such a big deal? This way you aren't stuck with whatever version came with the OS. This way MS can upgrade it and make it easier to stay with a frsh mail client. I really don't get the complaints about that here. It also makes it easier for MS to avoid lawsuits. Can you really blame them for wanting to do all this? Besides, I don't know 1 single solitary user who uses Outlook Express, not one. They all use either Outlook or webmail. Personally I love using plain old Gmail. It's simple to use, and travels with me everywhere I go.
  • 7Enigma - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    I missed out on the $50 upgrade deal a couple months ago (literally forgot by 1 day) but since I have Vista and my parents really don't want/need to upgrade their systems I think we could all swallow $150 for the 3 user license (my mom's laptop would especially benefit).

    My question is since we don't live in the same house/town is that in violation of the family deal? I'd use one license for my computer and the other 2 for my parents computers.

    Thanks for this likely simple question, but I'm not about to read a EULA!
  • nafhan - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    If you know someone with an email address at a university or college, I think you can still buy the student upgrade to Win 7. That's $30.
  • strikeback03 - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    Is an email address all that is required? I have a university email address.
  • Matt Campbell - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    A .edu email is all you'll need. Iirc the terms also stipulate you have to show you're enrolled for at least 0.5 credit hours if Microsoft audits you in the future.
  • strikeback03 - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    lol, I wonder if it would count if I audit a session or two of the class my boss teaches.
  • Matt Campbell - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    The $30 student deal is a great one. However, I would caution people against using the Digital River purchase, it's not a downloadable .iso but rather a "box" file that can't easily be made into a bootable DVD. It's a particularly poor choice for those migrating from a 32-bit OS to a 64-bit as the files often can't even be unpacked. There's more info. online at sevenforums, slickdeals and elsewhere. Microsoft offers the deal directly by calling 1.877.696.7786 (mailed DVD for $35 plus tax), this is probably a better option for most to avoid the hassles.
  • The0ne - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    The files unpack when you run the setup. Windows setup then runs for the unpacked folder. You can quit setup and the folder will be there, ready for you to create an ISO with.

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