The only thing I could find in the forum directly related to the subject above was posted by you on Jan 2003:
"Most of the tests in PerformanceTest are single threaded. This means that only a single CPU will be used at a time. This is similar to a lot of commonly used applications, which are also single threaded."
Is this still the case? If so I don't understand why my "old" 3.6GHz Pentium D Dual Core (Dell Precision 380) is ~x4 slower on integer math than the benchmark 3.5GHz "QX6800 Intel Core 2 2930 BL6710" with 4 cores.
If (hypothetically) your tests are truly single threaded, all other things being equal, wouldn't the "integer math" (which is what my application needs) rating be directly proportional to clock speed?
Greg Nash
"Most of the tests in PerformanceTest are single threaded. This means that only a single CPU will be used at a time. This is similar to a lot of commonly used applications, which are also single threaded."
Is this still the case? If so I don't understand why my "old" 3.6GHz Pentium D Dual Core (Dell Precision 380) is ~x4 slower on integer math than the benchmark 3.5GHz "QX6800 Intel Core 2 2930 BL6710" with 4 cores.
If (hypothetically) your tests are truly single threaded, all other things being equal, wouldn't the "integer math" (which is what my application needs) rating be directly proportional to clock speed?
Greg Nash
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