Re: Speed test on Mac G5, anyone? [message #35609] |
Thu, 03 July 2003 16:05  |
Rick Towler
Messages: 821 Registered: August 1998
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Senior Member |
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"Paul van Delst" wrote in message ...
> Rick Towler wrote:
>>
>> And more more importantly, is RSI planning an x86-64 version
>> of IDL for the Opteron and the Lateron?
>
> The Lateron? As in: "Not now, honey....lateron." ???
Exactly :)
The Opteron's sibling the "Clawhammer" aka the Athlon64 has been dubbed the
Lateron by the fellas at theinquirer.net due to it's ever slipping launch
date.
-r
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Re: Speed test on Mac G5, anyone? [message #35758 is a reply to message #35615] |
Tue, 08 July 2003 20:58  |
Richard French
Messages: 173 Registered: December 2000
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Senior Member |
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>
> It is too bad apple didn't submit SPEC CPU2000 results for the PPC G4 (at
> least I couldn't find them on the spec site. Maybe you can dig up some
> unofficial scores). While the SPEC CPU benchmarks they released for the PPC
> 970 should be taken with a shaker full of salt the comparison would be a
> start.
>
And from
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103_2-1021642.html:
Although Apple has won praise for the new Macs as a substantial improvement
over earlier machines, some have criticized the choices made in putting
together the rival Dell machine for use in so-called SPEC tests. Apple's
tests used the same GCC compiler for both machines, with the Dell boxes
running the Linux operating system. Critics charge that much higher
benchmarks can be achieved using the Windows OS and an Intel-optimized
compiler, rather than GCC.
"It wasn't really a fair test," said one analyst, who said that the Dell
machines are capable of producing scores 30 percent to 40 percent higher
than those produced under Apple's methodology. "The reason this happened is
Apple had a third party go out and test a Dell under less than optimal
conditions."
In response, an Apple representative said it wanted to compare hardware
performance, so it made sense to use the same compiler on the Mac and the
Dell. The SPEC benchmark tests measure the performance of the hardware and
the compiler.
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Re: Speed test on Mac G5, anyone? [message #35759 is a reply to message #35615] |
Tue, 08 July 2003 20:56  |
Richard French
Messages: 173 Registered: December 2000
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Senior Member |
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>
> It is too bad apple didn't submit SPEC CPU2000 results for the PPC G4 (at
> least I couldn't find them on the spec site. Maybe you can dig up some
> unofficial scores). While the SPEC CPU benchmarks they released for the PPC
> 970 should be taken with a shaker full of salt the comparison would be a
> start.
>
From
http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20030625. gtsandyjune25/BN
Story/Technology/
Nice to see that they included Mathematica in the bake-off:
"What really matters, of course, is real world performance. Apple made its
case on Monday with impressive benchmark test results and a series of live
demos that pitted a dual-processor 2.0 GHz PowerMac G5 test system against
two Intel-based computers: a 3.0 GHz Pentium 4 and a 3.06 GHz dual-processor
Xeon system.
"Marketing demos are always chosen to highlight a product's best features.
Past Apple "bake-off" tests have usually featured Adobe Photoshop doing
difficult things with graphics, which played to the Mac's strengths. This
time, however, the demos highlighted graphic performance (Photoshop),
animation (Luxology), pro audio (Logic) and large-scale numerical problem
solving (Mathematica).
"Wolfram Research co-founder Theo Gray concluded his demo of Mathematica
with this observation: "The competition for [the PowerMac G5] is not PCs
anymore. The competition for our customers is high-end workstations that
cost twice as much. And it's faster than all of them, too."
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