Windows 8 RTM Benchmarked
jjslash writes "Microsoft's PR machine has been hard at work over the past few months, trying to explain the numerous improvements Windows 8 has received on the backend. But are there real tangible performance differences compared to Windows 7? TechSpot has grabbed the RTM version of Windows 8, measuring and testing the performance of various aspects of the operating system including: boot up and shutdown times, file copying, encoding, browsing, gaming and some synthetic benchmarks." Lots of other sites are running reviews including: Infoworld, CNET, Computerworld, and Gizmodo, with very mixed opinions.
Lots of other sites are running reviews including: Infoworld, CNET, Computerworld, and Gizmodo, with very mixed opinions.
You mean they're mixing the real opinions with the bought ones?
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
from windows 7 sp2 with ie 10, better knows as win8
What do we get here? The teaser! Just cut to the chase, would ya?
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Windows 7 won by a small margin on the 3d and gaming benchmarks.
Not really "windows" anymore when you can only run one app at a time...
And the benchmarking methodology is pretty fucking terrible. (Lets not do something interesting like Chrome W7 vs. Chrome W8)
As for the reviews, wasn't this about benchmarking?
- But are there real tangible performance differences compared to Windows 7?
- TechSpot has grabbed the RTM version of Windows 8, measuring and testing the performance of various aspects of the operating system
Expected a "... and" followed by the TechSpot answer! /. writes interesting summaries based on interesting stories.
What the point of TFS if one has to read up to TFA?
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
The sly omission of Chrome on Windows 7 from the browser benchmark is face-meltingly biased.
So after reading through the entire article (wait, was I supposed to do that?) the bottom line is that there is no significant difference that any regular user would care about.
I don't think shaving a second or two off of boot time is going to impress people when they see the user interface is "all different" now.
Where is the first post from a uid above 2600Hz uh, I mean 2600000 praising windows 8 ?
Did we get rid of them ? Slashdot will live for ever, forget about the 6 digits or lower uid posts that say /. has come so low they will never come back. They are lying. /. is too addictive and funny also.
Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
Well done, but job not finished.
I don't really mean that. Wait. Yes, I do. Sort of.
Windows ME was awful. Windows 2000 was pretty much the first version of the platform I would call usable. Cairo was very buggy, then a little more buggy, then a little less buggy a degree at a time through SP3. Vista was the ME of NT (ie, bloody awful). 7 is a fairly decent platform. By that I mean, I haven't had a kernel crash in over a year of using it on a daily basis, and that is saying something - every single other OS I have ever used has had a kernel crash of some description in the time I've used it. If Windows 8 is going to follow the pattern, it's going to be another godawful abortion. I'll stick with 7 and probably wait for 9.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
Like any self respecting Slashdotter I haven't read the article. Did they talk about the abortion that is Metro (or whatever it's called now)? Whatever they've done under the hood will be nullified by the interface, at least in terms of the user being able to get his work done. I swear, W8 is going to make Millennium and Vista look like resounding successes.
*But* the 'Metro' launcher is an abomination. Having something fill my entire screen with glaring colours and toybox tiles when I am looking to launch an application is the exact opposite of the discreet, unintrusive interface that I'm looking for on a workstation desktop.
What did users complain about with Vista? UAC. They hated that every five minutes all your colours went grey, and you couldn't continue without clicking yes on a box in the middle of the screen. But UAC did that because, love it or hate it, there was a reason for it to demand your attention and draw you out of whatever you were doing.
The 'Metro' launcher has no such reason. It completely breaks my flow of thought every time it swallows my desktop. It breaks the illusion that I am working on a constant surface. It is a jarring alteration to the consistency of the desktop experience. It causes the eye and the mind to pause, to catch, and to wonder what the fuck is going on. It might as well be a BSOD for the effect it has on my concentration.
Now with time, I accept that the 'where did all my stuff go?' feeling will dissipate. The interruption will become familiar and not shocking. We'll get used to it. But I fundamentally refuse to accept that a glaring fullscreen, interuption is a step forward in UI. Stick it on a tablet by all means. But it is simply not suited to genuine cognitive multitasking.
boot is faster the windows 7, and file transfers, including torrents, are faster.
I have a dual boot with 7 and 8, so the machine is the same. Especially extremely large file, or large groups of files.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Something feels wrong about comparing Windows 7 /w Office 2010 and Windows 8 /w Office 2013. Will Office 2013 not be available for Windows 7 or something? Why would you compare two different Office products in two different operating systems? Seems like an unreliable metric if you're trying to compare the performance between operating systems and not different versions of Office.
I saw this cross-posted on ./ previously. Cakewalk benchmarked Win7 versus Win8 when running their digital audio software, and saw some significant improvements:
http://blog.cakewalk.com/windows-8-a-benchmark-for-music-production-applications/
The Cakewalk software runs in desktop mode, which is fine since we're all going to ignore Metro after we log in, right? :)
I've been running the Win8 developer preview with Metro disabled for months now in my engineering lab, and it got to the point that I forgot it was Windows 8.
Is the rumor true that the registry setting to remove Metro is gone in the RTM version? Now that will be annoying!
I hate the new metro interface, but i like some features like: easy restore (refresh and reset), windows to go, virtualization, shorter boot times and newer windows display driver model. Let's see how it does
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
any way to back port the core speed ups to 7? or get 8 without the new GUI?
Is it worth upgrading from Win7 for a standard desktop or standard laptop? For most users, probably not. Windows 8 is designed for hybrid tablets, Kinect-style PC-interfacing, unusual monitor configurations, etc. It's for "non-standard" computing, generally. If benchmarking were updated to capture "usability" in many different computing environments, this is where Win8 would leap ahead of its predecessor.
I love how every review mentions how startup and/or shutdown times have improved slightly, as was the case when Windows 7 was released. However, they seem to miss two somewhat important aspects of this:
1. It is not very common for users to turn their PCs on and off several times during the day. Also, there's hibernate. I, for one, keep my PC on for weeks at a time unless I'm somehow forced to reboot, which brings me to...
2. While a regular startup has been getting a second or two faster with every release, the new Windows Update subsystem (introduced in Vista) means it takes BLOODY AGES TO SHUT DOWN THE DAMN OS if there happens to be updates pending, and if you're lucky IT WILL ALSO TAKE BLOODY AGES TO START THE DAMN THING UP AGAIN AFTERWARDS, as the update process is finished. And if you turn off the computer while this is happening, you will probably have to reinstall Windows.
I've hosed a few systems by shutting down a laptop after a meeting or presentation, only to find that Windows wanted to spend the next half an hour or so installing updates.
Number of comments on the release of windows new kernal after almost a decade of work
Trolls: Eleventybillion
Insightful and nerdy: Err.. This is slashdot, burn Microsoft and their advancements!
Windows 7 vs. Linux: the Desktop Comparison
Personally, in spite of going out with you for several months, I still don't know if I love you or not. It sure takes a lot of time to get used to you, so let's not jump into bed just yet.
So the article shows that Win8 gets from the Windows logo to the desktop in 18 seconds. On a Core i7-3960X. With a Kingston SSDNow V+ 200 256GB SSD. This is regarded as fast.
I have Win7 running on a several-year-old netbook. It has the cheapest SSD I could find, a Corsair 32GB. Time from hitting the power button to desktop is about 20 seconds.
(That's with a very stripped-down Win7 install, courtesy of RT Se7en Lite. So far I haven't noticed any loss of functionality in this lite version).
So it looks like the way to make Windows "fast" is to bloat it up to such ridiculous levels that something that'd have rated as a supercomputer some years ago crawls under it, and then to remove some of the suckage in a later release to make it appear... well, less sucky.
The OS is supposed to manage the available resources. It's easy when you just run one thing at a time.. I want to know how Windows 8 performs when you have 3 number crunching jobs, each requiring 2 GB running at low priority, a different process which loads 6 GB of data into RAM, a steady stream of IO from each process, interactive use, and maybe some music or video too. Throw in a VM too, to really push it. Does it still manage to be responsive and interactive?
My Win 7 laptop with 4 GB RAM becomes unpleasant to use when I start a VM which uses 2 GB. My Linux box has 16 GB and it handled the above scenario pretty well, but adding another instance of the 6 GB fitting job caused it to crash! (I was swapping to something that wasn't meant to be used as swap, so my fault). Admittedly, testing OSes under stress isn't easy to do reproducibly, but I think a subjective opinion would be really interesting....
Since the summary is a teaser;
* Generally the same performance as Windows 7, sometimes marginally faster
* Faster startup and shutdown
* Games and web browsing the same (IE10 no better than IE9)
* Multimedia slightly faster (x264 encoding/decoding)
I'm sure corporate group policy will take care of the faster startup and shutdown times :)
So is that a compliment or a condemnation?
ATI drivers, better metro apps, and media center.
Those boot times were in the 20's. Can someone please explain this? My computers boot in... 2-4 seconds. Anything beyond 10 and I start considering reinstalling the OS. In the 20's, I start thinking I bought the wrong computer. What on earth were they testin this on?
I also noticed that the JS benchmarks were completely incomparable. Each benchmark was for a different browser, and the browser company that made each test suite won (firefox won the kraken suite, and google won the V8 suite).
I would have been interested to see Chrome on Win7 VS Chrome on Win8, or FF on Win7 VS FF on Win8, but alas.
Online Starcraft RPG? At
Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
At last Microsoft figured out how to defeat that law. Instead of doubling the speed up the PC or the OS, now the goal is slowing down the user. A breakthrough in computer science.
Windows 8 will be the death of Windows (unless they dropp that fucked up UI)
I beta tested Windows 8 and it is not ready. It actually "killed my computer" by that I mean when I installed the beta release trial it worked fine for a couple of days, then I started having issues with video, for some reason no matter what my power settings were set to my monitor would go to sleep after 5 minutes. I went to the forums asked for help, and got several answers from Microsoft forum moderators. I tried them all and none of them resolved the issue. Then a couple of days later I was writing some code and my computer shut down (which seems to be normal with a windows system) so I powered it back on and is shut off immediately again. So, I cracked the case open to see if my video card or something had come unseated. When I grabbed my video card to check it, it was so hot that it burned me. I waited for it to cool, unseated it, fell back to my on-board video card, and powered her back up. I then realized that not only did it fry my video card but my 4 core processor was now only running on one core. Here are my system specs for those curious.
Black Edition AMD Phenom II X4 965 3.4ghz Processor
Asus Motherboard model M4A785-M
4gb (2gb x 2gb)Crucial Ballistix DDR2 RAM
ATI Radon HD 3600 Series 512mb Dual DVI Out Video Card
Western digital 250gb IDE Hard Drive
Thermaltake 430w Power Suply
With that said I would highly recommend staying away from Windows 8 for a while to come!
What are you smoking? I have yet to see any corporate IT group policy make boot times faster. That isn't their mandate; their mandate is to make sure the machines work within the environment. "To each his own" never apples because almost no one has admin rights to their machines where I work. Would I like to strip out unneeded services? Yes but the only way to make that happen is to change companies.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Different implementation! :)
Support of DirectX 11 mean that all features of this API is implemented. But how implemented?
Is it same code?
Does code compiled with same compiler and same compiler options?
If all API implementation is old but performance differs mean that new OS deliver messages and other stuff with fresh code. It is true
I take from your response you don't work in a corporate environment where you don't get admin rights. I've worked as a contractor in dozens of large corporations. And very few employees get admin rights. For my argument to be true, I only need one true case. But your argument completely falls apart in the presence on one true case. Thanks for playing.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
However: As a developer, you get admin rights (always), & of course, as an admin you do also (domain wide or just local machine), usually, OR, you can't do your job - that's the way it USUALLY goes!
The last time I checked, the vast majority of workers in corporations are not developers. But maybe in your narrow little world, everyone is a developer. Are you ever right about anything APK?
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Ahem, the entire line was that group policy makes booting slower. You responded by telling them to disable rights which does not apply to most workers. So your entire point was meaningless. That's like saying if you're poor, you should play the lottery to win some money. Again, are you ever right? Your history seems to say no.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
hey illiterate fool, apk said zero on rights - apk said services http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3050993&cid=41022347
How could he not? Unknowing Fool proved he can't even read, lol!
Hahahaha no shit! Unknowing Fool can't even read right http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3050993&cid=41022347
hahaha unknowing fool mixed up rights and services, what a dolt!
someone should tell unknowing fool the diff between rights n services.
apk quit rubbing it in. unknowing fool's a dolt that can't read right.
You nuked unknowing fool 2x before and he tried you again? Dumb.
apk it's safer to say unknowing fool's extremely LIMITED, hahaha.
man did he hahaha. unknowing fool's blowing modpoints to hide it.
What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
APK, you're not fooling anyone. What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
APK, you're not fooling anyone. What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
APK, you're not fooling anyone. What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
What's it like to be so wrong all the time? APK == troll
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.