Benchmark Analysis: Boost Behavior

Let’s dig into some of the testing to see how the systems responded during the benchmarks. We re-ran several of the tests while simultaneously monitoring the processor frequency, temperature, and power. Unfortunately for our comparison, the power polling results provided by our monitoring tools don’t seem to monitor the same power draw. The Intel power numbers are for the SoC package, but the AMD power numbers appear to be just the CPU cores, which is an unfortunate byproduct of testing two different platforms.

PCMark 10

PCMark 10 is a benchmark platform that attempts to simulate real-world tasks by running a variety of workflow, and the results were perhaps the most interesting of any of the benchmarks. There is a major discrepancy in how the AMD CPU behaved compared to the Intel. The Ice Lake platform kept the CPU frequency at a minimum of 3.5 GHz, with bursts to 3.9 GHz when under load. The Picasso processor was very aggressively switching from low frequency to high frequency, and was rarely indicating that it was over 3.0 GHz, but clearly demonstrating its higher peak frequency of 4.0 GHz in several locations. Both systems were fairly even in terms of CPU temperature, and Intel’s aggressive turbo levels were evident with peak power levels of 40 Watts for brief moments. The Ice Lake platform finished the benchmark about 200 seconds quicker than the Picasso system.

Cinebench R20 Single-Thread

We see somewhat similar results when only a single CPU core is loaded with the Picasso CPU frequency varying quite a bit. There’s also an average higher temperature on the AMD platform during this workload, and once again Ice Lake finishes the rendering quite a bit sooner thanks to its stronger CPU cores.

Cinebench R20 Multi-Thread

With all cores loaded the graph is considerably altered. Here the AMD processor is able to maintain a much higher frequency across its cores for much longer, while Intel's chip is only able to maintain 3.5 GHz for about 30 seconds before it runs out of headroom, dropping the cores down to around 2.6 GHz. But despite the lower frequency, the much higher IPC on Sunny Cove allows the Ice Lake platform to finish quite a bit sooner.

GPU Performance - Vega vs Iris Platform Power
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  • m53 - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    @Samus: It is sad that some people would buy the inferior Ryzen 15inch without even knowing that there is a better Intel 15inch version available and you don’t have be a business person to buy it. Pathetic anti-consumer attempt from Microsoft.
  • 0ldman79 - Tuesday, December 17, 2019 - link

    Pretty sure it's because Intel is having issues supplying the chips to the OEMs.

    Microsoft, like most OEM, are hedging their bets and designing systems to run AMD chips.
  • MBarton - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    It's sad that anyone would buy an overpriced Microsoft Surface.
  • MBarton - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    Because Intel 10nm yields are so woefully pathetic that Microsoft had to source AMD's old Zen parts to help make up for the lack of parts.
  • Polacott - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    I guess for some people, the extra cpu processing power is not needed however the extra storage can be a handy thing? processors are quite powerful these days. Of course for me I would choose higher processing speed over storage, if it were for my mother i would choose storage over speed.
  • Brett Howse - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    You can get the same storage in both.
  • Polacott - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    For the dame money?
  • Brett Howse - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    The business model with Intel is $100 more but comes with Windows 10 Pro which is a $100 upgrade over home, so for the hardware, it's the same money, but the business version is overall $100 more expensive.
  • m53 - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    @Brett: Agreed. In addition it comes with a better and more expensive ram. so the intel version is not just insanely faster, it is also the better value overall.
  • Polacott - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    Considering Microsoft is just giving Windows Home in AMD offer and Pro + better ram on Intel one, they must be getting the intel cpu at a tremendously affordable price or up pricing the AMD offer considerably.

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