Winstone 2001 |
Source: Zdnet |
|
Content Creation Winstone
2001 keeps multiple applications open at once and switches among those
applications. Content Creation Winstone 2001's activities focus on what we call
"hot spots," periods of activity that make your PC really work--the times where
you're likely to see an hourglass or a progress bar.
Business Winstone is a
system-level, application-based benchmark that measures a PC's overall
performance when running today's Windows-based 32-bit applications on Windows 98
ME, Windows NT 4.0 (SP6 or later), Windows 2000, Windows Me, or Windows XP which
runs real applications through a series of scripted activities and uses the time
a PC takes to complete those activities to produce its performance
scores.
Winstone 2001 |
|
Motherboards |
WinStones |
Ranking |
1. |
Content Creation - AN11 - 133 MHz |
69.7 |
|
2 |
Content Creation - AN11 - 140 MHz |
71.3 |
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
Business Winstone - AN11 - 133 MHz |
43.3 |
|
2. |
Business Winstone - AN11 - 140 MHz |
49.1 |
|
As with SysMark2001, Winstone 2001 tests all say
that you don't need a AthlonXP 2000+ with a KT266A and DDR RAM to run
office based applications (because they run faster than a human can really use them). Office software still has a way to go before it can
take advantage of current CPU's raw power.
WinBench 99 is a
subsystem-level benchmark that measures the performance of a PC's graphics,
disk, and video subsystems in a Windows environment. WinBench 99's tests can run
on Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, and Windows Me
systems.
WinBench 99 v1.2 Benchmark Results |
|
FIC AN11 |
Score |
Ranking |
1. |
Business Disk - 133 MHz |
5480 |
|
1a. |
Business Disk - 140 MHz |
5210 |
|
|
|
|
|
2. |
High-End Disk - 133 MHz |
14200 |
|
2a. |
High-End Disk - 140 MHz |
12900 |
|
|
|
|
|
3. |
Business Graphics - 133 MHz |
800 |
|
3a. |
Business Graphics - 140 MHz |
921 |
|
|
|
|
|
4. |
High-End Graphics - 133 MHz |
1550 |
|
4a. |
High-End Graphics - 140 MHz |
1710 |
|
The HDD performance of the FIC AN11
is low compared to other KT266A boards we have looked at. As for the AGP
performance, it's the opposite, the numbers the AN11 Stealth pulls in are quite
good! I wonder if there's a driver related issue
here...
Sisoft Sandra 2001 |
Source: Sandra |
|
Sandra is designed to
test the theoretical power of a complete system and individual components. The
numbers taken though are again, purely theoretical and may not represent real
world performance.
SiSoft Sandra 2001 Benchmark Results |
|
FIC AN11 |
Score |
|
Multimedia Benchmark |
|
1. |
Integer SSE - 133 MHz |
9159it/s |
1a. |
Integer SSE - 140 MHz |
9789 it/s |
2. |
Floating-Point SSE - 133 MHz |
9718 it/s |
2a. |
Floating-Point SSE - 140 MHz |
10524 it/s |
|
CPU Benchmark |
|
3. |
Dhrystone ALU - 100 MHz |
4618 MIPS |
3a. |
Dhrystone ALU - 115 MHz |
4897 MIPs |
4. |
Whetstone FPU - 100 MHz |
2308 FPU MFLOPS |
4a. |
Whetstone FPU - 115 MHz |
2571 FPU MFLOPS |
|
Memory Benchmark |
|
5. |
Integer ALU - 100 MHz |
2041 MB/s |
5a. |
Integer ALU - 115 MHz |
2134 MB/s |
6. |
Float FPU - 100 MHz |
1902 MB/s |
6a. |
Float FPU - 115 MHz |
2098 MB/s |
The FIC
AN11 Stealth with the AthlonXP
1900+ (that is detected as a XP2000+ for some reason) produces results in Sandra which are faster
then the reference CPU's.