After the change from PT9 to PT10 many of us have notice a big change in the G2D Mark
But what does this score really reflect in real life computer usage?
One of the thing where I can see a big benefit of good 2D skills is when you speed up (fast forwarding/seeking) a video
Not long ago in the PerformanceTest v9 days - the Intels integrered Graphics in their CPUs like the UHD 630 beats the hell out of many of the expensive dedicated Graphic Cards. But with the new PT10 - it now has to deal with a score of 297 (PTv9 something around 850)
So know my old Geforce GTX 650 card (PTv10 G2D score: 336) is better than the Intels UHD 630
But…
When I speed up a video (h.264 or H.265) in VLC (trying all relevant settings) with the GTX 650 in the slot things starts to went wrong already around a speed at 8X
With Intels UHD 630 I can speed up to 72X and The video still runs by smooth
Running Win 10 64
But what does this score really reflect in real life computer usage?
One of the thing where I can see a big benefit of good 2D skills is when you speed up (fast forwarding/seeking) a video
Not long ago in the PerformanceTest v9 days - the Intels integrered Graphics in their CPUs like the UHD 630 beats the hell out of many of the expensive dedicated Graphic Cards. But with the new PT10 - it now has to deal with a score of 297 (PTv9 something around 850)
So know my old Geforce GTX 650 card (PTv10 G2D score: 336) is better than the Intels UHD 630
But…
When I speed up a video (h.264 or H.265) in VLC (trying all relevant settings) with the GTX 650 in the slot things starts to went wrong already around a speed at 8X
With Intels UHD 630 I can speed up to 72X and The video still runs by smooth
Running Win 10 64
Comment