CPU Performance, Extended Tests

Because this is our first look at the FX-8800P, we also ran some of our more in-depth benchmarks to get a feel for the CPU. Again, the big comparison point here is the Athlon 200GE. Some of these benchmarks might not be the intended use-case for these CPUs, but this data is provided to give a sense of the performance for various tasks.

Compile Chromium (Rate)

AppTimer: GIMP 2.10.4

Agisoft Photoscan 1.3.3, Complex Test

Dolphin 5.0 Render Test

Mozilla Kraken 1.1

Speedometer 2

In some of these tests, there is up to a 2x performance moving up to the 200GE. Arguably not surprising, given the TDP difference and the architecture difference. It all depends on the end-user scenario whether that actually means much to them. If it's all about lower idle/semi-idle power, then the FX-8800P still wins.

CPU Performance, Basic Tests Integrated Graphics Performance
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  • YukaKun - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    I'm still using my A8-3850 as my HTPC, so... :shrug:

    Cheers!
  • Ro_Ja - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    They could've at least added more USB ports.
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    I'm wondering if no more were available. This is a mobile chip, and while I can't find IO specs, 4 each USB2 and USB3 (the other 4 USB are in a pair of headers) along with 2 SATA is about right for a laptop. 4 external 3.0 ports, 2x 2.0 ports for keyboard and touchpad, and 2 more for optional misc internal device connections.
  • eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    Wow, there must be a lot of unsold and unused Carrizos in somebody's warehouse!
  • artk2219 - Thursday, August 15, 2019 - link

    There are, AMD had TONS of stock left over from carrizo and Llano, to the point where you can still find a lot new old stock Llano chips. We will be seeing these carrizo and honestly even Bristol Ridge parts for years.
  • jamesb2147 - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    Use case: Open source hardware router (with PCIe network card, natch).

    Fight me.
  • evernessince - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    Consumes too much power for that. The ARM chips inside many modern routers are far more efficient.
  • RMSZaphod - Friday, September 27, 2019 - link

    Sure, for a handful of homebodies surfing the net, gaming etc. If you have a business environment, with layer 7 filtering, a mail server, multiple routed IPSEC VPN nodes, and come under moderate bot attacks (cuz server, road warrior access, etc) Pi's and other ARMs bog down. I've had one come under an attack on a Monday morning when everyone was logging in and checking email, and that morning VPN tunnel traffic burst, over heated and shut down. Until the attack stopped, I couldn't get it to stay up. 90 minutes of unhappy clients isn't worth the delta on sunk costs. Athlon GE setup with dual port intel giga nic are rock solid. Under similar circumstances it barely breaks a sweat, It also sustains bandwidth through the tunnels when the traffic is hundreds of smaller transactions from many users throughout the day(10-15%-basically full line speed), and had some 5-7% lower latency.
    Point is it depends. For ~$175-200 you've got a 5-8 year lifespan machine that's virtually trouble free. That's $22 to $40 a year, for a very flexible, highly configuarable router/firewall/dns/dhcp/proxy-server/layer7/VPN/Roadwarrior VPN/VLAN device (also compatible with IPSEC VLANs from Cisco, Juniper, Barracuda, Linksys, Netgear, Sonicwall etc/DynDNS compatability, BGP, even email gateway type filtering)
  • kadoo - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    yes, it's windows 7 time!
  • obama gaming - Wednesday, August 14, 2019 - link

    Is the M.2 NVMe or SATA?

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