3D Performance
By
Harald Thon,
published on February 5, 2003
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: the, first, pentium
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: the, first, pentium
Contents
- 1. Centrino Mobile Technology: More Than Just A New Mobile Processor
- 2. Pentium-M In The Business Segment
- 3. Pentium-M In The Consumer Segment
- 4. Price Comparison: Pentium4-M- Vs Pentium-M Systems
- 5. The 855 Chipset Family
- 6. Technology Behind Pentium-M Or Banias
- 7. Technical Marketing
- 8. Overview Of The Test Systems
- 9. Benchmarks Under Windows XP
- 10. SiSoft Sandra 2003 Benchmarks: CPU, Multimedia And Memory
- 11. SiSoft Sandra 2003 Benchmarks: CPU, Multimedia And Memory, Continued
- 12. SiSoft Sandra 2003 Benchmarks: CPU, Multimedia And Memory, Continued
- 13. Multimedia Performance: PC Mark 2002
- 14. Raytracing: POV-Ray For Windows
- 15. MP3 Encoding: Lame
- 16. 3D Performance
- 17. System Performance: Sysmark 2002
- 18. Batter Life In Games, Presentations, And DVD Playback
- 19. Conclusion: Off To A Respectable Start
16. 3D Performance
As the table of features implies, the graphics subsystems of the two test platforms are rather different. The Pentium-M system has the GeForce 440 Go and 64 MB, and the Pentium4-M system has to make do with an ATI Radeon 7500 and 32 MB video memory. So if we made a direct comparison, then that would be comparing apples to oranges, and we are not going to do this. Still, we still wanted to provide you with the scores, because they at least give you some kind of idea of the Pentium-M's 3D-capabilities.
Direct 3D Performance: 3D Mark 2001 SE

Open GL Games: Quake3 Arena


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