Performance: Windows 10 Follows in the Footsteps of Windows 8

There have been a lot of changes to Windows performance over the years when a new version comes out. It was pretty much a given than any new version would require more hardware than its predecessor. Things started to change with Windows 7, which had basically the same hardware requirements as Vista. Windows 8 took that even further, by having the same requirements initially, but working on making things like boot time much quicker. Windows 8.1 update actually lowered the hardware requirements over Windows 8 with things like WIMBoot.

Windows 10 does not have any major changes to the underlying platform this time. Yes, there are some new things like DirectX 12, and WDDM 2.0, but overall it has been a pretty stable set of requirements. In fact, the base system requirements are exactly the same as Windows 8:

  • 1 GHz Processor
  • 1 GB RAM (32-bit) or 2 GB RAM (64-bit)
  • 16 GB Storage (32-bit) or 20 GB Storage (64-bit)
  • DirectX 9 capable graphics with WDDM 1.0 driver
  • 800x600 display resolution

Now, granted, these are minimums, but the system will run on that. Even low cost tablets are going to have slightly more than these minimums so Windows 10 should be no issue for even older machines.

On that note, one new feature not currently available on Windows 10 but will be rolling out in a future update is memory compression, which is an evolution of the memory deduplication added in Windows 8. With memory compression, when the memory subsystem is pressured by too many active pages, the system will compress some of the pages rather than page them to disk. The CPU power required to compress and decompress the pages will of course be increased, but the overall system speed should feel a lot snappier than when having to recovery pages from disk. This will be of most benefit to the lower cost devices such as tablets which come with the minimum memory specificatioins.

But, despite the lack of differences in minimum requirements, it could still be the case that Windows 10 is going to use more or less of the hardware that is available. Is it going to offer more performance than Windows 8, or less? Let’s take a look.

Boot Time

One area where a lot of effort was spent in the Windows 8 days was boot time. There were some pretty dramatic improvements made here over Windows 7, and the proliferation of UEFI in new systems has helped to speed this up the point where we now measure boot time in seconds rather than minutes.

Boot Time

Overall, the system boot time is not significantly different in Windows 10. For most devices, it was within a second either way. The ASUS G751 that I tested may be an outlier here, but on this one device I did see a big gain. There could have been software loading at launch which was removed as part of the upgrade, but regardless, Windows 10 boots at least as fast as Windows 8, and sometimes even faster.

Power Consumption

Another area where it is important to measure is power consumption. Windows 8 made some good gains here over Windows 7, and while this was not the focus of Windows 10, it will be important not to lose ground here either.

To test this, Ganesh ran his standard idle and load test on the Intel NUC with the Core i5-5250 processor. Load is running Prime95 and Furmark at the same time, which is really going to show the maximum power consumption of the platform.

Power Consumption - Intel Broadwell i5 NUC

As we can see here, both levels are practically identical, which in this case is not a bad thing. There were no promises of better power usage, but ensuring there was not a regression is important.

Battery Life

Another test which I felt was going to be quite relevant is tablet battery life. I upgraded the Surface 3 to Windows 10, and ran through our tablet Wi-Fi battery life test with the display at 200 nits.

Battery Life - Tablet Wi-Fi at 200 nits - Microsoft Surface 3

Here we see a slight improvement in overall battery life. I got 16 minutes more time on Windows 10 than I did on Windows 8.1. There is always a bit of a variance in this test, but once again not having a regression is a positive. Although impossible to directly measure, using Edge as the browser over Internet Explorer 11 could also provide some of this time gained since the new browser performs so much better, it can race to sleep quicker after loading the page.

One test that will have to wait is the tablet video test. I’ve run it, but I need to test a few other devices before I am ready to give out the results.

System Performance

As far as system performance, I also ran the Surface 3 through the PCMark 8 suite which simulates real life workloads.

PCMark 8 - Microsoft Surface 3

Looking at PCMark is interesting since the benchmark is really a comprehensive look at the entire system. As you can see, both the Creative and Home scores have jumped up. The workloads in both of these include gaming, and the Work test does not, so it is possible this is due to new Windows 10 graphics drivers. Other media capabilities are also tested whereas the Work test does not include media at all.

I also ran some tests on a much more powerful system to see how it performed. The ASUS G751 laptop is a gaming laptop with a quad-core Haswell mobile i7, 24 GB of memory, and a NVIDIA GTX 980M GPU.

PCMark ASUS G751

Again on PCMark we see a substantial gain, as we did on the Surface, even though this is PCMark 7 compared to PCMark 8 on the Surface 3. The ASUS G751 would crash the PCMark 8 workloads in Windows 10. This is a substantial gain though. Windows 10 does have some memory management improvements but it is difficult to believe this would affect a system like this with 24 GB of system memory. Updated graphics drivers for Windows 10 may explain the gain here.

Cinebench R15 ASUS G751

Cinebench is a purely CPU benchmark, and Windows 10 shows the exact same scores for this benchmark. There is no loss of performance though which is really the main concern.

Gaming Benchmarks ASUS G751

Overall the gaming results are very similar from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10, but unlike PCMark, there is a slight decrease in overall frames per second. Some of the games are very close and within the margin of error, but DOTA 2 saw a 5% decrease in performance which is significant. Civilization: Beyond Earth dropped 8% from moving to Windows 10. Unfortunately the laptop does not have integrated graphics or an AMD card to see if this is consistent across other cards or just a driver issue with the new NVIDIA drivers for Windows 10.

Desktop Gaming Performance

Shifting gears, let’s take a wider look at gaming performance on our GPU testbed. To better quantify the performance impact of Windows 10 we’ve gone ahead and tested a selection of games across GPUs from all of the major discrete GPU generations from both AMD and NVIDIA. This means Radeon R9 Fury, R9 290X, and R7 370 for GCN 1.2, GCN 1.1, and GCN 1.0 respectively. And for NVIDIA, GeForce GTX 980 Ti, GTX 750 Ti, and GTX 680 for Maxwell 2, Maxwell 1, and Kepler, in that order.

Desktop Gaming Performance - Battlefield 4

Desktop Gaming Performance - Shadow of Mordor

Desktop Gaming Performance - Civilization: Beyond Earth

Desktop Gaming Performance - The Talos Principle

Desktop Gaming Performance - Grand Theft Auto V

Despite being the biggest graphics stack overhaul since Vista, gaming performance is remarkably consistent on our GPU testbed, even more than on our laptop testbed. Performance is on average unchanged, and the results we see are typically within the +/- 3% variability we see when benchmarking GPUs. No game and no vendor sees an improvement from Windows 10.

This if anything is a testament to the work put in by Microsoft and the GPU vendors ahead of Windows 10’s launch. Though admittedly not starting from scratch, all of the relevant parties have been able to get their driver performance up to expectations by launch, avoiding the teething issues of Vista. Though we suspect the DirectX 12 code paths will still be under major development for some time to come, at this point it’s safe to say that upgrading to Windows 10 will not have a detrimental effect on current DirectX 11 games.

In Summary

So does Windows 10 perform better or worse than Windows 8.1? Overall I would say it is more or less similar, with some improvements in some tests and at worst a slight decrease in some of the laptop (and only laptop) gaming scores. There is not a major performance regression seen, at least on the devices that were tested so far. Windows 8 made some big performance gains over Windows 7 in several areas, and Windows 10 appears to continue to slightly refine things again. Despite the re-additon of things like transparency the battery life was slightly better when browsing the web, which is a good sign considering the new web browser being used.

Windows 10 does not really lose any ground to the gains that Windows 8 made, and as a result it's in good standing right out of the gate.

The Free Upgrade and Activation Is Windows 10 the upgrade to get?
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  • zman58 - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    "worlds largest and most obnoxious spyware"

    We really don't know exactly what data it sends back on the user and their system(s) do we? The EULA does not detail this for us. In fact, the EULA has you agree to whatever they desire from your system--for improving the product. The spyware option is purely opt-out, for those of us who know what opt-out means and are capable of figuring out how to opt-out.

    Then once you can/do opt-out, how can you be assured you will remain opted-out through upgrades, hot-fixes, patches, and what-not?

    Bottom line is that the vendor decides what and when they want to collect data from your system, you have absolutely no control over them. Read the EULA and consider what it means before you click "I agree". You might not want to click that button...

    Perhaps using an alternative reliable, safe, secure, and private operating system might be a better approach. ...Well hello there Linux.
  • bs grinder - Tuesday, December 26, 2017 - link

    thanx
    john
  • ddriver - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    "The privacy concerns are certainly not overblown, but for most people, they will make the trade-off of less privacy if it means an improved experience. The textbook example here is advertising, where in order to deliver relevant ads to the user"

    Ah yeas, I bet the whole world rejoices being able to give up their privacy to be blasted with ads. It is a great trade-off indeed.

    "If you are concerned, the best thing to do is to read the privacy statement and adjust your settings accordingly."

    I bet that's the best you can do, pretending that somehow clicking a button or two magically makes all problems go away

    Also, I see a catch in those "privacy settings". You seem to only be able to turn off "sending MS info", but that doesn't imply that data is still not being mined and sent anywhere else.
  • imaheadcase - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    You are aware these settings are present in almost almost win OS? The only privacy stuff they collect is related to MS services, onedrive, etc. Just because win 10 gave people options (gasp!) vs win 8 and 7 does not mean those did not, and still do have it.
  • ddriver - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    No they are not. Especially if you bother to watch what updates you install. For example, MS will try to sneak in the "telemetry" data miner service on your windows 7 as an update, but it is not there to begin with.

    I haven't used and will likely never use a windows version after 7, but in a "clean" windows 7 install none of the win 10 invasions of privacy are present. It doesn't keylog, it doesn't listen to speech, it doesn't analyze text or file content and it doesn't report everything you do back home.

    Oh, and you can also chose not to install certain updates, whereas with the "nice free" windows 10 MS get to deploy on your system whatever it wants - all in the name of your comfort.
  • Michael Bay - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    Your religious belief in 7 is amusing, at least.
  • ddriver - Thursday, August 27, 2015 - link

    If anyone around here is a believer, that is you, believing MS are trustworthy that is.
  • Gigaplex - Friday, August 28, 2015 - link

    If you don't trust MS, you shouldn't be using any version of Windows.
  • althaz - Thursday, August 27, 2015 - link

    FYI: Windows 7 collects telemetry by default. It was turned off by default in Vista and XP, but most OEMs turned it on for you. So Win 10 is collecting the same information as Windows XP, Vista and 7 (and 8), for most people.
  • yuhong - Friday, August 28, 2015 - link

    Does Win10 really "keylog" outside of search boxes and the like? search suggestions are not new either. There is no evidence that Win10 can read arbitrary files either.

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