- May 3, 2009
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I've been benchmarking my systems with CPUmark99 since my old Pentium 90 and was wondering if perhaps one or two of you wouldn't mind running this bench on your i7? It'll have to be a 32 bit OS. I know this is an ancient benchmark, is only integer, and only uses one core among other things. But I have found that each of my systems has shown big increases with this bench and I'm curious to see how the i7 does.
You can download it here and you don't even have to install anything, it just runs from the exe file. http://tooay.com
Here are the results from my systems over the years.
Pentium 90 - 5.5 16.4Mhz per CPUmark99
Celeron 450A (o/c) - 36.1 12.5MHz per CPUmark99
PIII 850 - 76.1 11.2MHz per CPUmark99
P4 2.4 - 157 15.3MHz per CPUmark99
P4 3.06 - 194 15.8MHz per CPUmark99
E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - 445 7.2MHz per CPUmark99
Of course I could run two instances of CPUmark99 with the E6400 and basically double the score but I'm really just i nterested in how a single core of the i7 performs. As you can see except for the P4 each successive CPU become more efficient at running this benchmark.
Thanks!
You can download it here and you don't even have to install anything, it just runs from the exe file. http://tooay.com
Here are the results from my systems over the years.
Pentium 90 - 5.5 16.4Mhz per CPUmark99
Celeron 450A (o/c) - 36.1 12.5MHz per CPUmark99
PIII 850 - 76.1 11.2MHz per CPUmark99
P4 2.4 - 157 15.3MHz per CPUmark99
P4 3.06 - 194 15.8MHz per CPUmark99
E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - 445 7.2MHz per CPUmark99
Of course I could run two instances of CPUmark99 with the E6400 and basically double the score but I'm really just i nterested in how a single core of the i7 performs. As you can see except for the P4 each successive CPU become more efficient at running this benchmark.
Thanks!
