SuperPI calculates the number PI to 1 Million
digits in this raw number crunching benchmark. The benchmark is fairly diverse
and allows the user to change the number of digits of PI that can be calculated
from 16 Thousand to 32 Million. The benchmark, which uses 19 iterations in the
test, is set 1 Million digits.
Lower numbers denote faster calculation times
(seconds), and hence, better performance.
Super PI (1
Million digits) Benchmark Results (Lower is better) |
|
Processor |
Seconds |
Ranking |
1. |
Pentium 4 3.2C |
45 |
|
2. |
Athlon64 3200+ |
43 |
|
3. |
AthlonXP 3200+ |
44 |
|
4. |
AthlonXP 2500+ |
53 |
|
5. |
AthlonXP 2500+ @ 2.21 GHz |
47 |
|
Super Pi
loves bandwidth and high clock speeds that's why the AthlonXP 2500+ does
relatively poorly here. I still remember when breaking 60 seconds was an excellent feat!
The Persistence of Vision Ray Tracer (POV-Ray) is
an all round excellent package, but there are two things that particularly make
it stand out above the rest of the crowd. Firstly, it's free, and secondly, the
source is distributed so you can compile it on virtually any
platform.
Lower numbers denote faster calculation times
(seconds), and hence, better performance.
POVRay
Benchmark Results (lower is better) |
|
Processor |
Seconds |
Ranking |
1. |
Pentium 4 3.2C |
179 |
|
2. |
Athlon64 3200+ |
145 |
|
3. |
AthlonXP 3200+ |
144 |
|
4. |
AthlonXP 2500+ |
173 |
|
5. |
AthlonXP 2500+ @ 2.21 GHz |
143 |
|
POVRay is
more of a pure processor benchmark and here we see that while the AthlonXP 2500+
comes in second last at stock, it actually comes in first when overclocked!