All purpose benchmark apps

DeaconFrost

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A friend of mine is building a new system along with my Sandy Bridge build. We were wondering what apps you would use the benchmark the systems and compare? I'd like something that gave a range of scores for the different hardware, and not be limited just to gaming performance, etc, but that would be a welcome component.

Also, free is good, too! Does Futuremark still make software for this that's reputable...or is there something else entirely?

Thanks!
 

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A friend of mine is building a new system along with my Sandy Bridge build. We were wondering what apps you would use the benchmark the systems and compare? I'd like something that gave a range of scores for the different hardware, and not be limited just to gaming performance, etc, but that would be a welcome component.

Also, free is good, too! Does Futuremark still make software for this that's reputable...or is there something else entirely?

Thanks!

Deacon:

I'm in the same position. I intend to build Sandy Bridge within a few weeks and want to do some informal comparisons to my current mighty E6600.

SiSoft Sandra used to be pretty good and still may be. I'm not sure if there are both free and paid versions.

3D Mark was a standard benchmark app a couple of years ago.

I'd be interested in other suggestions.

I've read a bunch of Sandy Bridge tests in the last few days, but most had a gaming emphasis, unfortunately.

If I recall correctly, Cinebench is a pretty good indicator of overall strength.

You can always do SuperPi for a raw comparison of CPU power---how fast can the CPU compute Pi to a million or 32 million decimal points.

Here's some SuperPi comparisons, computing Pi to 1 million decimal points:

My ancient Pentium 4 2.26: 78 seconds after a fresh boot

Even more ancient Pentium 90: 35 minutes

Pentium 3.2 Northwood: 42 seconds

My Core 2 Duo E 6600 at stock clock of 2.4 GHz: 21 seconds


PC world record as of May 24, 2006, 11.359 seconds with a Conroe 2.66 overclocked to 4.470; long since surpassed.

I think current upper end Intel Sandy Bridge iron is down under 10 seconds, and around 7 with a big overclock.
 

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My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
CPU
Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
Motherboard
AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
Memory
8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)
Graphics Card(s)
none; graphics are integrated on CPU
Sound Card
onboard: Realtek ALC1150; external: USB Behringer UF0-202
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2340M 23 inch IPS
Screen Resolution
1600 x 900
Hard Drives
System: Crucial MX100 series SSD, 128 GB;
Data: Samsung Spinpoint 103SJ, 1 TB;
Backup: WD Caviar Green WD30EZRX-00D8PB0, 3 TB
PSU
Rosewill SilentNight 500 watt fanless, semi-modular
Case
Antec Solo II
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12S; Noctua F12 intake, Noctua S12A exhaust
Keyboard
Microsoft 200 6JH-00001 USB
Mouse
Dell or Microsoft optical wired; USB
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Premium
Browser
Pale Moon
Other Info
All fans PWM; speeds at idle: CPU circa 500 rpm; intake circa 600 rpm; exhaust circa 600 rpm; CPU temps 27 idle and 47 C load in a warm room (27 C/81 F) when running Intel Extreme Tuning Utility stress test.
Pass Mark you can compare to other systems with comparable hardware.....and free. Pay gives you added benefits.
 

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VIA Onboard
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Samsung 830 120GB SSD
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Western Digital Caviar Black WD7501AALS 750GB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s
Western Digital Caviar Black WD6401AALS 640GB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s
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COOLER MASTER Silent Pro RS850-AMBAJ3-US 850W Modular
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COOLER MASTER HAF 932 RC-932-KKN5-GP Black
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Scythe "Mugen-2 Rev.B" (2 ScytheKaze-Jyuni PWM fans)
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Logitech K-320
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Kensington
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Avast Inernet Suite
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IE 9 ; Chrome
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