General Usage Performance

Although not as performance-critical as content creation applications, it is the set of every day applications like Office and other general usage programs that the majority of users find themselves interacting with the most.

We start with VeriTest's Business Winstone 2002:

The Business Winstone tests are "market-centered" tests. Business applications are the popular applications employed by most users every day.

Five Microsoft Office 2002 applications (Access, Excel, FrontPage, PowerPoint, and Word)
Microsoft Project 2000
Lotus Notes
WinZip 8.0
Norton AntiVirus
Netscape Communicator

General Usage Performance
Business Winstone 2002 (Score in Winstones - Higher is Better)
Pentium-M 1.6GHz

Pentium 4 2.66GHz

Pentium 4 2.4GHz

Pentium-M 1.5GHz

Pentium 4 2.2GHz

Pentium 4 1.7GHz

Pentium 4 1.6GHz

Pentium 4 1.5GHz

Pentium 4 1.4GHz

27.0

25.2

24.9

24.8

24.3

20.0

19.6

19.0

18.5

|
0
|
5
|
11
|
16
|
22
|
27
|
32

Integer applications are very branch intensive and thus the Pentium-M's shorter pipeline and well balanced branch predictor (balanced for the architecture) give the 1.6GHz Pentium-M the title of the fastest mobile processor in Business Winstone 2002. Not only can the Pentium-M outperform the fastest Pentium 4, but it also comes out ahead of the 2.66GHz Pentium 4, even despite its higher speed FSB (533MHz vs. 400MHz).

General Usage Performance
Office Productivity SYSMark 2002 (Score in SYSMarks - Higher is Better)
Pentium 4 2.66GHz

Pentium-M 1.6GHz

Pentium 4 2.4GHz

Pentium 4 2.2GHz

Pentium-M 1.5GHz

Pentium 4 1.7GHz

Pentium 4 1.6GHz

Pentium 4 1.5GHz

Pentium 4 1.4GHz

146

146

141

135

134

117

112

108

105

|
0
|
29
|
58
|
88
|
117
|
146
|
175

We close off with some more office performance scores; this time around, the Pentium-M comes in neck and neck with the 2.66GHz Pentium 4 - a desktop CPU.

Because of the difficulty in putting together a good desktop vs. mobile graphics comparison, we've limited our performance tests here to 2D-only. For gaming performance of the Pentium-M, take a look at our Centrino Notebook Roundup.

Content Creation Performance Final Words
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  • zigCorsair - Wednesday, July 14, 2004 - link

    I thought it was a very informative article. Of course, I'll be upset if it's biased, but being a master's student in CS, many of the exact details I was looking for were in here, and for that I say thank you.
  • Zebo - Monday, May 10, 2004 - link

    I don't see whats so impressive. An athlon mobile 2600/2800 xp 35W version, which runs ~2000Mhz will kill these. To little to late.
  • Anonymous User - Wednesday, September 10, 2003 - link

    how the hell could this be a balanced and informative article when in their own analysis they ignored their own data?

    There is no mention of the anamolous nature of the BAPCO test..absolutely NOTHING...

    Its enough for me to question the competency of this site...and even to the point where I suspect that certain unethical compromises have been made.
  • Anonymous User - Wednesday, September 10, 2003 - link

    Yeah, I agree with Sprockkets... same reason Athlon XP loses to the P4 in this benchmark... someone was trying to make the P4 look better, and everything else look worse. Now all the sudden, this new great CPU is getting it's but kicked because of all the P4 optimizations (and probably non-P4 deoptomizations).
  • sprockkets - Tuesday, September 9, 2003 - link

    I wonder why the P4 trashes the PM on Content Creation Performance and nothing else? Maybe it's the stupid skewing toward the P4. Why else would it lose here and kick butt everywhere else? www.theinquirer.net has an article which brought this to readers attention.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, August 21, 2003 - link

    "Without a trace cache, the design team was forced to develop a more accurate branch predictor unit for the Banias core. Although beyond the scope of this article, Banias was outfitted with a branch predictor significantly superior to what was in the Pentium III. The end result was a reduction of mispredicted branches by around 20%."

    Wouldn't he mean that the branch predictor was superior to the P4?
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, August 19, 2003 - link

    looks good
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 8, 2003 - link

    An outstanding well balanced article, after this read I feel I really know about Centrino. Thanks

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