Benchmarks (continued):
SiSoft Sandra 2004 Memory:
The memory bandwidth module reads and writes chunks of data to memory using very little CPU cycles and shows the results in MB/s. Here the FoxConn 875P wins out.
AIDA 32:
AIDA 32 is a system information reporting utility that can also benchmark the read/write speeds of your system memory. Here again the 875P chipset wins out.
PC Mark 04:
One of FutureMark’s latest benchmark applications, PCMark 04 measures the overall performance of your system. Here the 865G is up by 12 points.
PC Mark 2002:
An earlier version, PC Mark 2002 is also a good general system performance benchmark. CPU, Memory and Hard Drive performance marks are given. Again the 875P squeaks past.
PiFast 4.2:
PiFast 4.2 is a simple test run from the command prompt that will calculate the value of Pi to the number of decimal places requested. The score is based on the total time required to do so, and provides a good indicator of processing power. I ran the test to calculate to 10,000,000 decimal places and used the following internal settings: No Disk Memory, 1024K FFT, Chudnovsky method. The results show a half second difference, favoring the 875P (lower is better).
ScienceMark 2.0 Cypher Benchmark:
Supporting SSE, SSE2, Hyperthreading and newer Prescott core instructions, ScienceMark 2.0 contains a complete suite of benchmarks. I ran the Cypher Bench benchmark and obtained the following score. Less than a half second difference, but again going to the 875P (lower is better).
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