SYSmark 2004 Overall

The entire sysmark run including all the individual tests we will be reporting took anwhere between two and three hours to run. The two main suites (Internet Content Creation and Office Productivity) each took up half of the time (in contrast to Winstone where the business benchmark completes much faster than content creation).

The overall score which takes a little of everything into account shows the Gallatin based Extreme Edition coming out on top in both of its flavors followed by the fastest Prescott.

This is the first time we've run Sysmark in our labs, and we weren't sure what to expect from this highly visible test suite. We can say that the numbers we see here an in the following graphs don't tend to reflect what we see though out the rest of our testing.

We included these numbers for completions' sake but we are not going to draw any conclusions based on the benchmark as we have not had much experience with it. We do know that this time around AMD did have equal input into the creation of the benchmark, although it does still seem to favor Intel's architectures.

SYSmark 2004 Internet Content Creation

SYSmark 2004 3D Content Creation

SYSmark 2004 2D Content Creation

SYSmark 2004 Web Publication

 

SYSmark 2004 Office Productivity

SYSmark 2004 Communications

SYSmark 2004 Document Creation

SYSmark 2004 Data Analysis

General Usage & Content Creation Performance DirectX 9 Performance
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  • Jeff7181 - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    I'm going to go out on a limb here and say 2004 is the year of the Athlon-64 and Intel will take a back seat this year unless their new socket will help increase clock speeds. When AMD makes the transition to 90nm I think you'll see a jump in clock speed from them too... and I'm willing to bet their current 130nm processors will scale to 2.6 or 2.8 Ghz if they want to put the effort into it before switching to 90nm.

    Intel better hope people adopt SSE3 in favor of AMD-64 otherwise they're going to lose the majority of the benchmark tests.

    On second thought... the real question is how high will Prescott scale... will we really see 4.0 Ghz by the end of the year? Will performance scale as well as it does with the Athlon-64?

    Right now, looking at the Prescott, the best I can say for it is "huh, 31 stages in the pipeline and they didn't lose too much performance, neat."
  • Barkuti - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    Check out the article at xbitlabs:

    http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/presc...

    Less technical but with a wider set of tests.
  • Stlr22 - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    ;-)
  • Stlr22 - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    ((((((((((((((CRAMITPAL))))))))))))))))

    Listen,I just want you to know that everything will be alright. Really, life isn't all that bad buddy. It's not good to keep so much hate inside. It's very unhealthy. We are all family here at the Anandtech forums and we care about you. If you ever need to sit down and talk, I'm ll ears pal. So that your brother doesn't feel left out, here's a hug for him aswell.......


    (((((((((((((AMDjihad)))))))))))))
  • KF - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    Yeah, the Inquirer was right about 30 stages. Maybe I should start reading it! However I did read the one where the news linked to an article purporting that an Inquirer reporter had bumped into a person who had overheard an Intel executive say Prescott was 64 bit. Maybe Derek and Anand didn't have the space to squeeze that tiny detail into the review.

    I saw a paper on the Intel site a while ago, seemingly intended for some professional jounal, the premise of which was that it is ALWAYS preferable to make the pipeline longer, no matter how long, while using techniques to reduce the penalties. Like, 100 stages would be a good thing. Right then I knew what one team at Intel was up to. The fact that they didn't explain any new penalty reduction techniques only made it all the more sure what Intel had in the works (otherwise why write the paper?), and that they had the techniques worked out, but still under wraps.
  • ianwhthse - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    Err.. *Cramitpal

    Sorry about that. My mind is wandering.
  • ianwhthse - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    Did we actually just get 26 good posts in before crumpet showed up?
  • FiberOptik - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    I like the part about the new shift/rotate unit on the CPU. Does this mean that prescott will be noticeably faster for the RC5 project? Athlon's usually mop the floor with whatever the Northwood can pump out.
  • eBauer - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    "Botmatch has bots (AI) playing, shooting, running, etc. (deathmatch) while Flyby does not. The number that you should be most interested in is the Botmatch scores."

    No, I am talking about the botmatch scores from previous articles. Well aware of the difference between flyby and botmatch. http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1946&a... In that article, all CPU's had about 10 more fps than the CPU's in the prescott article.




  • AnonymouseUser - Sunday, February 1, 2004 - link

    "I am curious as to why the UT2k3 botmatch scores dropped on all CPU's... Different map?"

    Botmatch has bots (AI) playing, shooting, running, etc. (deathmatch) while Flyby does not. The number that you should be most interested in is the Botmatch scores.

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