Page 5 - PCMark 2003 and SiSoft SANDRA
PC Mark 2002PCMark2002 Pro measures and makes a diagnosis of your computers performance under home and office usage. It has the capability to test all types of PCs, laptops and workstations using 39 comprehensive performance benchmarking tests. Although PCMark2002 Pro is a full-fledged professional benchmark, its exceptional ease-of-use makes even novice users feel comfortable in testing their own systems.
The integrated Online Result Browser service compares your results with PCs for all PCMark2002 tests with other results submitted by PCMark2002 users around the world. Submitted results will help you get reliable information about your hardware and help you decide which hardware is the optimal upgrade for your system.
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PCMark 2002 | CPU | MEM |
Pentium 4 2.4 (533) | 5931 | 6299 |
Pentium 4 2.4 (800) | 5990 | 8381 |
Pentium 4 2.6 (800) | 6000 | 8619 |
Athlon XP 3000+ (333) | 6450 | 4809 |
Athlon XP 3200+ (400) | 6813 | 6166 |
Pentium 4 2.8 GHz (800) | 6964 | 8811 |
Pentium 4 3.0 (533) | 7548 | 6796 |
Pentium 4 3.2 (800) | 7536 | 9227 |
The validity of this benchmark is a little questionable, as the performance of the P4 3.06 GHz seems to be on par with the 3.2 GHz. Still an amazing score. However, let's take a look at the results from SANDRA:
SiSoft Sandra Benchmarks
SiSoftware Sandra (the System ANalyser, Diagnostic and Reporting Assistant) is an information & diagnostic utility. It should provide most of the information (including undocumented) you need to know about your hardware, software and other devices whether hardware or software. Sandra provides similar level of information to Norton SI, Quarterdeck WinProbe/Manifest, etc. The Win32 version is 32-bit and comes in both ANSI (legacy for Windows 98/Me systems) and native Unicode (Windows NT4/200X/.Net) formats. The Win64 version is 64-bit and comes in native Unicode format.
Do note that all the SANDRA benchmarks are synthetic and thus are may not tally with real-life performance. The latter stands for whatever your environment is, i.e. which applications you run with what amount of data and so on. It is up to you to decide whether what Sandra measures is what you want to measure.
Here you can find the scores taken with Sandra.
Sandra | CPU | MEM |
Pentium 4 2.4 (533) | 6451 | 2562 |
Pentium 4 2.4 (800) | 7435 | 4566 |
Pentium 4 2.6 (800) | 7710 | 4612 |
Athlon XP 3000+ (333) | 8120 | 2630 |
Pentium 4 2.8 (800) | 8413 | 4618 |
Athlon XP 3200+ (400) | 8840 | 2860 |
Pentium 4 3.0 (533) | 9531 | 2666 |
Pentium 4 3.2 (800) | 10003 | 4625 |
Hubba bubba ... Here we see a bit better overview as things scale better with Sandra. Man, we just broke the 10000 barrier :) You can also have a look at memory performance with 400 MHz DDR systems. Funnily enough the Athlon 3200+ has Dual Channel DDR memory, the ASUS mainboard is not rather utilizing that option very well and it's not even close to the Pentium 4 3200 MHz
The next benchmarks are based on games. The CPU's used are faster than a graphics card can handle. So in the highest resolutions you'll notice not much difference in the results. This is the videocards bottleneck as it can't push any harder.