On Tue, 2004-01-27 at 17:19, George wrote: > >>>>> "Emiliano" == Emiliano Brunetti <emiliano.brunetti@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > Emiliano> On Tue, 2004-01-27 at 15:51, George wrote: > >> >>>>> "Ben" == Ben Stringer <ben@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Emiliano> ... > >> a lot of time in the process. If you really need performance, apply > >> the money you save to more RAM. > > Emiliano> George, > > Emiliano> i was 'asked' to do this job. I can agree with you on many points, yet i > Emiliano> have to do some kind of testing. > > Emiliano> E. > > I read that again and I sounded pretty pompous. Sorry. > > -- > ********************************************************************* > * George Yanos * * > * UTC at UIC * * > * 312-413-0059(w) * * > * 708-848-4221(h) * * > * gyanos@xxxxxxx * * > ********************************************************************* 195803 OK Guys, I understand whats needed here, without detail I will try shed light It is what we hardware technicians call a system benchmark, How this works is we run a program that shows you numerically the maximum performance you can get out of the combination of the hardware, the loaded drivers combined with the software (OS) installed . So take word for example how fast can the hardware process documents of a certain size or how long will it take to compress a series of files of a certain size, also when playing games how many frames per seconds [FPS] at the various resolutions and color depths can the card produce. Just remember that often the manufacturers spec and the actual performance differ due to the current state of the systems and many other restrictions. Our company PROLINE Computers for example will test several different configurations we then choose the best performers and those that we find to be most stable under the load. These configurations are what we would use as the ideal systems for that operating system, OK I know what some are going to say, the kernel runs at the same speed on this hardware as on any other hardware, this maybe true, however your drivers will certainly influence the speed of a system, the mix of components also effects the speed of your system. Here is an example we tested 2 PCs for gaming loaded with Windoze Xplease and the difference in the results just on the graphics card in FPS was 150,The difference in the specs was the on had a via chip-set and the other had an Intel board and chip-set, both had same ram, hard disk and screen-cards etc.. We then load the latest Intel inf update for windows Xplease and we found that the upgrade agp driver combined with the new directX and the latest Detonator driver for the card brought the Intel up by 98 FPS. So we repeated the exercise on the VIA PC and it rocketed the difference to an astonishing 234 FPS. We need tool like 3dbenchmark an win-bench for Linux. As a manufacturer we are expected to provide the fastest machines on earth for as little as possible money Its challenging but fun Anyway thats my two cents Have a great day -- Chadley Wilson <chadley@xxxxxxxxxxxx>