Office Performance

The dynamics of CPU Turbo modes, both Intel and AMD, can add a wrinkle to testing in environments with a variable threaded workload. There is also an added issue of the motherboard remaining consistent, depending on how the motherboard manufacturer wants to add in their own boosting technologies over the ones that Intel would prefer they used. In order to remain consistent, we implement an OS-level unique high performance mode on all the CPUs we test which should override any motherboard manufacturer performance mode.

All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.

Dolphin Benchmark: link

Many emulators are often bound by single-threaded CPU performance, and general reports tended to suggest that Haswell provided a significant boost to emulator performance. This benchmark runs a Wii program that raytraces a complex 3D scene inside the Dolphin Wii emulator. Performance on this benchmark is a good proxy of the speed of Dolphin CPU emulation, which is an intensive single core task using most aspects of a CPU. Results are given in minutes, where the Wii itself scores 17.53 minutes.

Dolphin Emulation Benchmark

Crystal Well doesn’t help much in Dolphin, indicating it is more CPU frequency limited than DRAM/cache limited.

WinRAR 5.0.1: link

Our WinRAR test from 2013 is updated to the latest version of WinRAR at the start of 2014. We compress a set of 2867 files across 320 folders totaling 1.52 GB in size – 95% of these files are small typical website files, and the rest (90% of the size) are small 30 second 720p videos.

WinRAR 5.01, 2867 files, 1.52 GB

WinRAR is our typical benchmark to go to when testing whether DRAM is factor, and the improvements provided by the Crystal Well implementation trump any frequency deficit.

3D Particle Movement

3DPM is a self-penned benchmark, taking basic 3D movement algorithms used in Brownian Motion simulations and testing them for speed. High floating point performance, MHz and IPC wins in the single thread version, whereas the multithread version has to handle the threads and loves more cores.

3D Particle Movement: Single Threaded

3D Particle Movement: MultiThreaded

3DPM, like Dolphin, is concerned more with CPU frequency than DRAM accesses.

FastStone Image Viewer 4.9

FastStone is the program I use to perform quick or bulk actions on images, such as resizing, adjusting for color and cropping. In our test we take a series of 170 images in various sizes and formats and convert them all into 640x480 .gif files, maintaining the aspect ratio. FastStone does not use multithreading for this test, and results are given in seconds.

FastStone Image Viewer 4.9

Web Benchmarks

On the lower end processors, general usability is a big factor of experience, especially as we move into the HTML5 era of web browsing.  For our web benchmarks, we take four well known tests with Chrome 35 as a consistent browser.

Mozilla Kraken 1.1

Kraken 1.1

WebXPRT

WebXPRT

Google Octane v2

Google Octane v2

In the webtests, the Broadwell-DT CPUs didn’t necessarily take top spot but they are punching above their expected weight for their frequency.

Intel Broadwell Test Setup, Power Consumption Professional Performance: Windows
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  • ryrynz - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    Fairly certain it's 64MB on more than one of them.
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    All GT3e parts have 128MB of eDRAM. Did we mess up and put the wrong value at some point in this article?
  • patrickjp93 - Thursday, June 4, 2015 - link

    No, you're right. 64MB version of Crystalwell is coming to Skylake only as far as I'm aware.
  • Laststop311 - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    Wow Intel wont even let AMD keep the better iGPU performance crown. At least APU's had higher gaming performance going for them. Now they really have nothing. Plus this part uses less power and runs cooler than amd's igpu. Intel's engineering and process advantage is really showing. If I was building an HTPC this chip would be my go to. Can actually play any game with decent settings on it. Turn ur HTPC into a console PC gaming machine as well.
  • The_Assimilator - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    "Now they really have nothing."

    Couldn't have put it better myself. APUs were AMD's last card, and Intel just took that card out vof AMD's hand. If Zen isn't the second coming that's been promised (and I doubt it because of AMD's marketing track record), then AMD's CPU division is effectively dead.
  • Oxford Guy - Saturday, June 6, 2015 - link

    That's what Anandtech would have people believe. In reality the FX chips like the $100 8320E (I paid $133.75 with an 8 phase power motherboard from Microcenter) is very competitive for things like h.265 encoding, Blender, and so on with Intel -- especially on performance per dollar.

    So, Anandtech sticks 6 APUs in its charts and not a single 8 thread FX chip.
  • Oxford Guy - Saturday, June 6, 2015 - link

    Example... top scoring APU in Cinebench multithread: 325

    8 thread FX at just 3.33 GHz: 540
    at a more reasonable 4.28 GHz: 683
    4.56 GHz: 724
    4.78 GHz: 765
  • kevinkga - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    I love it that you have a Linux section and I was even pleasantly surprised to see Redis benchmarks, which I use a lot! For my purposes I'm investigating using:
    1. MAXIMUS VII IMPACT MINI-ITX board (because it's the only ITX on the market afaik that supports M.2 x4. Other ITX boards seem to only support M.2 x2 although they often don't make it clear.)
    2. Samsung XP941 128GB
    3. M350 ITX case
    4. Fedora 22 OS
  • xchaotic - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    "Samsung XP941 128GB" - a bit small I think - best to get 256GB straight away.
  • boozed - Wednesday, June 3, 2015 - link

    A salient question perhaps, but I wouldn't go calling it a poignant one.

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