Re: IDL and Macs. Speed is not only about squared roots [message #49295] |
Fri, 14 July 2006 08:20  |
Karl Schultz
Messages: 341 Registered: October 1999
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Senior Member |
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On Fri, 14 Jul 2006 06:26:22 -0700, jgc wrote:
> Hi,
>
>> You mention input and output. What exactly do you mean?
>
> You described it:
>
>> If you're chucking lots of data to and from the disk I'd expect a
>> laptop to be slower than a desktop regardless of cpu speed, as the
>> disks are slower in laptops generally (and Mac Minis too).
>
> You are right, sorry I forgot to mention that both are laptops, that's
> why I was surprised to see such a big difference
Disk drives can influence results like these in surprising ways. See:
http://www.macintouch.com/imacintel/bench.html
There is a discussion there about how using a Western Digital drive vs a
Maxtor resulted in some significant differences in a benchmark. If the
test being discussed here does significant disk I/O, the disk itself may
account for the observations.
It gets really hard to talk about benchmarks without getting into a lot of
detail. Sometimes I wish TimeTest3 didn't have the disk test in it. Yes,
I know you can turn it off with an option, but few people do. And I know
it is there to try to simulate a more realistic test environment. But
sometimes a huge difference in the disk subsystem can overwhelm the CPU
results and then when you get an answer you don't expect, you have to
drill down to the next level of detail and find out which tests in TT3 are
slower or faster, and so on.
>> The fairest test is going to be running the same program on an Intel OS
>> X machine, and the same machine booted into Windows.
>
> I might search for one, and let you know the results.
I'd love to see those results too. We have a machine here that could
boot both. I even remembered to repartition the hard drive to make room
:-). But I just have not gotten around to installing Windows yet.
Karl
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