http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu_value_alltime.html
Still a lot of AMD up there. But the thing with those benches (Anand's too) is that they insert a lot of stuff that very few people use. For instance Passmark takes into account all that:
- CPU tests Mathematical operations, compression, encryption, SSE, 3DNow! instructions and more
- 2D graphics tests Drawing lines, bitmaps, fonts, text, and GUI elements
- 3D graphics tests Simple to complex DirectX 3D graphics and animations
- Disk tests Reading, writing and seeking within disk files
- Memory tests Allocating and accessing memory speed and efficiency
- CD / DVD test Test the speed of your CD or DVD drive
So they take into account benches like Microsoft Excel 2007 Monte Carlo simulation (that's about crunching a lot of numbers in Excel) and so on.
A score/bench for the regular user who doesn't need all that would be nice. Select your PC uses and hit a button and the score will take into account
only what you need and use and that will make a huge difference in the top and that difference doesn't favor Intel, I tell you. It's not that hard to do it once you have all the benches.
For instance if you're a gamer, once you have a good video card and play full HD, the Phenom II X4/i5-760 is about as fast as the Sandy Bridge (a few fps). The big improvement is exactly in the areas very few people care about (Blender, Cinebench, 3dsmax...?). On what planet were they living when they decided to increase the performance in those areas? How many need that?
What are they thinking (Anand included) when they test the CPUs in gaming using powerful video cards and 1680x1050 resolutions? Who buys a HD 5870/GTX 580 (!) and plays at that resolution with no AA/AF (Anand's review on the Sandy Bridge)? Or this:
http://www.anandtech.com/bench/Product/288?vs=191
So the benches are "rigged" in order to "emphasize" the CPU and thus they are very misleading because they use a very unlikely scenario: High-end graphics card, low resolution and settings. And the noob looks at the review/bench and says: See, it's much better, look at all those bars!
Well, many of those bars are useless, and some are misleading. That's the Anand bench and not only.