System Performance

Moving on from SPEC to some of our more traditional laptop tests, I’ve taken the opportunity to add some new tests to the suite, which we’ll include on all laptops going forward. While SPEC is a fantastic set of tests to probe the limits of a platform, not everyone is going to run a workload that runs at nearly 100% CPU utilization for such a long time on a laptop. The 8-Thread tests took 4.5 hours to complete on Ice Lake, and 6.5 hours to complete on Picasso, which is likely not something most people would turn to a thin and light laptop for, so it’s important to see how both platforms perform on shorter tests where they can leverage their peak boost frequencies for a higher percentage of the duration.

PCMark 10

PCMark 10 - Essentials

PCMark 10 - Productivity

PCMark 10 - Digital Content Creation

PCMark 10 - Overall

PCMark 10 consists of several real-world tests, including web, video conferencing, spreadsheets, writing, and more. There are several GPU tests as well, including rendering, and some gaming. The suite also measures application start-up, and all aspects of the system’s performance factor into the score.

Intel’s CPU performance lead shows clearly here again, with significant leads in both the Essentials and Productivity tests, although AMD’s strong GPU pulls the Ryzen system very close on the Digital Content Creation tasks. But that is not enough to turn the tide, and the Ice Lake platform carries this win.

Cinebench R20

Cinebench R20 - Single-Threaded Benchmark

Cinebench R20 - Multi-Threaded Benchmark

Looking at the latest version of Cinebench tells a similar story as to what we’ve seen so far. Ice Lake’s significant IPC lead pulls it way ahead. On the multi-threaded test, the AMD platform does close the gap somewhat, which is similar to the SPEC rate 8 results.

7-Zip

7-Zip Compression

7-Zip Decompression

Checking out the popular 7-Zip file compression tool, the results are in-line with what we see in the desktop space. Intel generally has a lead on the compression side, but AMD claws back at decompression. It is a rare win on the CPU side for AMD here.

Handbrake

Handbrake Transcoding (Software)

Transcoding is a popular task, and Handbrake is one of the most popular tools. For this test, a 1080p movie is converted to 720p using the x264 encoder. Once again, Ice Lake offers significantly more performance when transcoding in software.

Handbrake Transcoding (Hardware)

Handbrake also supports various hardware encoders, such as Intel’s QuickSync, which provides significantly quicker transcodes at the same settings – albeit at larger file sizes and slightly lower quality compared to the software transcode, according to the Handbrake documentation. QuickSync has been very popular, and has been around quite a while. AMD also offers hardware encoding and decoding with their Video Core Next platform. Handbrake does support AMD’s Video Coding Engine (VCE) but the Surface Laptop 3 does not offer this as an option in Handbrake, so it was not able to be tested. As this is the only current Ryzen mobile APU we’ve tested, it may be a driver issue specific to the Surface branded processor.

x264

x264 HD 5.x

x264 HD 5.x

Our previous transcoding test, x264, was also run. Here we see that once again Ice Lake has a significant performance advantage, as it did with Handbrake software encoding.

Web Tests

All of our web tests were run with the current version of Microsoft Edge in Windows 10 1909. Web results are highly impacted by the underlying scripting engine, and Microsoft is going to be moving Edge from the EdgeHTML rendering engine to the Chromium open-source project that powers Google Chrome. When they make this change, expected early in 2020, we’ll revamp our suite with new tests.

Mozilla Kraken 1.1

Google Octane 2.0

WebXPRT 3

Intel has aggressively pushed their frequency ramping with Speed Shift, and one of the biggest beneficiaries of Speed Shift is web scripting, since the tasks tend to be very short. AMD is addressing this in Zen 2 with Collaborative Power Performance Control 2, or CPPC2, which is not as elegant of a name as Speed Shift, but promises to drop Zen’s frequency ramping from ~30 ms to ~1 to 2 ms, and will be a welcome addition on our web tests.

SPEC2017 - ST & MT Performance GPU Performance - Vega vs Iris
Comments Locked

174 Comments

View All Comments

  • m53 - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    @Samus: It is sad that some people would buy the inferior Ryzen 15inch without even knowing that there is a better Intel 15inch version available and you don’t have be a business person to buy it. Pathetic anti-consumer attempt from Microsoft.
  • 0ldman79 - Tuesday, December 17, 2019 - link

    Pretty sure it's because Intel is having issues supplying the chips to the OEMs.

    Microsoft, like most OEM, are hedging their bets and designing systems to run AMD chips.
  • MBarton - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    It's sad that anyone would buy an overpriced Microsoft Surface.
  • MBarton - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    Because Intel 10nm yields are so woefully pathetic that Microsoft had to source AMD's old Zen parts to help make up for the lack of parts.
  • Polacott - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    I guess for some people, the extra cpu processing power is not needed however the extra storage can be a handy thing? processors are quite powerful these days. Of course for me I would choose higher processing speed over storage, if it were for my mother i would choose storage over speed.
  • Brett Howse - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    You can get the same storage in both.
  • Polacott - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    For the dame money?
  • Brett Howse - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    The business model with Intel is $100 more but comes with Windows 10 Pro which is a $100 upgrade over home, so for the hardware, it's the same money, but the business version is overall $100 more expensive.
  • m53 - Sunday, December 15, 2019 - link

    @Brett: Agreed. In addition it comes with a better and more expensive ram. so the intel version is not just insanely faster, it is also the better value overall.
  • Polacott - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    Considering Microsoft is just giving Windows Home in AMD offer and Pro + better ram on Intel one, they must be getting the intel cpu at a tremendously affordable price or up pricing the AMD offer considerably.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now