System Performance

First on our list is to see how well these builds will do as "daily drivers" when used for general tasks (e.g. not gaming). While office workloads have traditionally been CPU-bound they have also traditionally been light on parallelism, meaning the benefits of multi-core CPUs haven’t always been consistent. What we have coming will be an interesting look in the tradeoff between more threads via Hyper-Threading and more clock speed.

Meanwhile I’ve also gone ahead and thrown in the overclocked numbers on the Mighty Milo since it was an overclocking-capable setup. The primary focus for this article is on stock performance, but it gives us a second look at what Mighty Milo can do with its overclocking abilities taken into account.

Starting with PCMark 8 then, PCMark provides various usage scenarios (home, creative and work) and offers ways to benchmark both baseline (CPU-only) as well as OpenCL accelerated (CPU + GPU) performance. We benchmarked select PCs for the OpenCL accelerated performance in all three usage scenarios. These scores are heavily influenced by the CPU in the system.

PCMark

On PCMark 7 the two systems are neck-and-neck. However on PCMark 8 the systems start pulling apart, with Mighty Milo taking the lead. The Work subtest in particular gives Mighty Milo a clear advantage, most likely due to the advantages of OpenCL acceleration on a faster video card.

Moving on, we have CINEBENCH R15, an image rendering benchmark. CINEBENCH provides three benchmark modes - OpenGL, single threaded and multi-threaded. Evaluation of select PCs in all three modes provided us the following results.

Cinebench R15

Single threaded performance on Cinebench is essentially a product of IPC and clock speed. With both systems here housing Haswell chips the competition drops down to a simple clock speed war with the Mighty Milo dragging behind at stock speeds and pulling a nice lead after pushing the clocks up. Though when we move to the multithreaded test the Hyper-Threading featured by the Ballistix Bantam’s Core i3-4170 trumps the overclocked Milo and sends them home with a silver medal.

On the GPU front SilverStone’s build simply has a faster GPU, and apparently is leaving a large chunk of performance on the table at stock. This is a trend that we will see form with this computer as the Mighty Milo continues to open up with more clock speed.

For a look at video encoding performance we have results courtesy of x264 HD Benchmark v5.0. This is simply a test of CPU performance with good scaling with both core count and individual core performance.

Video Encoding  - x264 HD 5.x

We see much the same trend developing here with x264. At stock the Crucial system holds the lead thanks to its faster Core i3 processor, though by the time we reach pass 2 things are surprisingly close. Otherwise when overclocked the Mighty Milo’s much higher clockspeed lets it really open up.

Up next, 7-Zip is a very effective and efficient compression program, often beating out OpenCL accelerated commercial programs in benchmarks even while using just the CPU power. 7-Zip has a benchmarking program that provides tons of details regarding the underlying CPU's efficiency. In this subsection, we are interested in the compression and decompression MIPS ratings when utilizing all the available threads.

7-Zip LZMA Benchmark

Decompression is one area I definitely felt was lacking while setting up the Mighty Milo for testing. Any file that I decompressed appeared to do so much slower than I was used to. Sure enough the numbers came and confirmed my observations. Here overclocking helps but ultimately the Core i3 in Crucial’s build provides a slightly better experience, reiterating that overclocking alone can’t always make up for a difference in performance-enhancing features.

Meanwhile, as businesses (and even home consumers) become more security conscious, the importance of encryption can't be overstated. TrueCrypt is a popular open-source disk encryption program can take advantage of the AES-NI capabilities of modern processors, and even though TrueCrypt is no longer under development, its internal benchmark provides some interesting cryptography-related numbers to ponder.

TrueCrypt Benchmark

We saw these results before in Ian's review of the G3258. One big drawback of Intel's entry-level CPUs is the lack of hardware AES cryptography support. Due to this we see the Core i3-4170 offering nearly ten times the throughput of the Pentium, even a respectable overclock hardly put a chip in the gap (no pun intended). Many don't feel the need for cryptography support. But anyone that uses it on a regular basis will definitely appreciate, and possibly even need, the added performance.

Agisoft PhotoScan is a commercial program that converts 2D images into 3D point maps, meshes and textures. The program designers sent us a command line version in order to evaluate the efficiency of various systems that go under our review scanner. The command line version has two benchmark modes, one using the CPU and the other using both the CPU and GPU (via OpenCL). The benchmark takes around 50 photographs and does four stages of computation:

Stage 1: Align Photographs
Stage 2: Build Point Cloud (capable of OpenCL acceleration)
Stage 3: Build Mesh
Stage 4: Build Textures

We record the time taken for each stage. Since various elements of the software are single threaded, others multithreaded, and some use GPUs, it is interesting to record the effects of CPU generations, speeds, number of cores, DRAM parameters and the GPU using this software.

Agisoft Photoscan Benchmark

Thanks to its more powerful Core i3 CPU, Crucial’s Ballistix Bantam pulls a win here. The lack of AVX and HT really hits the Mighty Milo, especially in the time-intensive first stage. Even overclocked, the Milo can improve on the shorter, latter stages, but it can’t close the gap on stage 1.

Our next system performance benchmark is the Dolphin Emulator. This is again a test of the CPU capabilities, and how well a CPU can handle emulating the Nintendo Wii’s PowerPC 750 CPU.

Dolphin Emulator

Dolphin is a pretty straightforward lightly-threaded CPU throughput test. At stock the faster Crucial system holds the advantage, otherwise the heavily overclocked SilverStone system can really run down the score.

Last but not least, we have a slightly more specialized test with Iperf. The network bandwidth testing tool gives us a look at the performance of the included 2x2:2 802.11ac Wi-Fi solutions in each build.

iPerf - TCP

I'm not sure if I should be surprised here from the results. I was expecting to see some crazy numbers having a couple of wireless ac motherboards to work with here. Turns out that not all 802.11ac setups are created equal. My first assumption is that the antennas on the Mighty Milo are just not in as ideal a location being planted on the back of the machine, while for lack of better creativity even having the Ballistix Bantam's antenna stuck to the side of the case yielded numbers that while not amazing are still appreciably better than any real world 802.11n bandwidth I've seen.

I was a mix of surprised, confused, and then disappointed over the Wi-Fi performance of the Mighty Milo. After some quick research to see what I was doing wrong though I found that my measurements were in line with those found by previous journalists who had hands-on time with this motherboard.

Now that we have had a look at general system performance let's go and see how they do when we want to have a little fun.

Round 2: The Showdown Gaming Performance
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  • nathanddrews - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    But... but...
    https://youtu.be/9gSQg1i_q2g
  • shmuck - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Damn straight! Somebody's got to do the complaining around here. Harumph.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detai...

    The privacy information which was missing from the link:
    https://www.surveygizmo.com/privacy/

    This is a lot more encouraging.
  • eanazag - Tuesday, November 17, 2015 - link

    My only gripe about the contest is it is closed too fast. It seems like you have less than 24 hours to enter it. The first one was confusing because Anandtech used to just place a post on the article and you were "entered". I think I have it figured out now. We just need a few more of these for me to enter.

    I understand the marketing hope on having it end so quickly. I typically read all the headlines when they're released and then read the articles later.
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Even after benchmarking, I still find it very difficult to favor one system over the other. They're both very solid builds without any show stopping flaws. Either system would serve a college student well in a variety of computing tasks. As usual, I love reading these build-a-rig articles.
  • Samus - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Damn that Silverstone is a sexy beast. Throw in i5-4690k in there and damn...
  • racerx_is_alive - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    The only problem with spreading these articles out they way they are is that I'm only 75% sure I signed up for the sweepstakes with the first article, but don't want to do it again and get my entry tossed. But otherwise, I really like the way this series is organized, and the computers they've built.
  • smorebuds - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    "IF YOU ENTER MORE THAN ONCE, ALL BUT ONE ENTRY WILL BE DELETED."

    Sounds like you'll still have an entry in there.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Humm, interesting. I hadn't considered that angle before. Thanks for the feedback.
  • ShieTar - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Nice, but am I the only one that feels that more fun should be poked at the 600W-PSU in the 200W-PC?

    Just shows that even when somebody knows what they are doing in general, they will always remain capable of messing up on some important detail.
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    The 600 watt PSU is excessive for the computer's current hardware, but it might be worth considering the extra wattage as headroom to grow into a more powerful CPU and/or graphics card later without being concerned about wattage. The Core i3-4170 is a 54 watt TDP processor and the GTX 950 is a 90 watt card. Moving up to a GTX 980 would add 75 watts more demand (165 watts total power according to NV's site) and an i7-4770 would need another 30 watts (84 watt TDP). That'd quickly turn the 200+ watt PC into a 300+ watt one which puts the PSU at 50% load which is well into the more efficient areas of its power delivery curve.

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