By
Harald Thon,
published on June 18, 2003
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: a, light, notebook, for, a, light, pocketbook | Themes: Business Notebooks
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: a, light, notebook, for, a, light, pocketbook | Themes: Business Notebooks
Contents
- 1. Averatec: Newcomer To The Notebook Market
- 2. A Brief Run-Down: The Low Voltage Version Of The Athlon-XP-M
- 3. A Brief Run-Down: The Low Voltage Version Of The Athlon-XP-M, Continued
- 4. Overview Of The Test Configuration
- 5. The Averatec 3150P From The Outside
- 6. ...from The Bottom And From The Inside
- 7. ...from The Bottom And From The Inside, Continued
- 8. Benchmarks Under Windows XP
- 9. Synthetic Benchmarks
- 10. SiSoft Sandra 2002, Continued
9. Synthetic Benchmarks
- 3200 Series Battery...
SiSoft Sandra 2002 Benchmarks: CPU, Multimedia And Memory
We ran the individual disciplines in SiSoft Sandra 2003 with many different power schemes. When we were plugged into the wall socket (AC), we selected "Always on" and "Portable/Laptop". In battery operation, we used the "Max battery" and "Portable/Laptop" schemes.

Because of its somewhat slower processor, (Athlon XP-M 1600+), the Averatec 3150P falls behind the competition, if only slightly.

In operations based on the multimedia instruction-set expansion iSSe2, the S6120 powered by the Pentium M is head and shoulders above the rest. The Averatec 3150P comes in third yet again.
- Previous page Benchmarks Under Windows XP
- Next page SiSoft Sandra 2002, Continued