New
#171
An update today tp PC Mark 10:
Release notes:
PCMark 10 v1.0.1403 – November 13, 2017
Improved:
- SystemInfo module updated to 5.3.629 for improved compatibility with the latest hardware.
Fixed
- Fixed an issue with the Web Browsing video workload not starting in some cases.
- Fixed an issue with the Web Browsing workload not starting when running on a proxy server.
- Improved logging for the App Start-up, Spreadsheets, Writing, and Web Browsing workloads.
Also the technical guide has been update: http://s3.amazonaws.com/download-aws...ical_Guide.pdf
By the way for those of you, like me, who have started using Controlled Folder Access in Defender, you need to ad the following two addresses to "Let an app through"
C:\Program Files\Futuremark\PCMark 10\jre\bin\javaw.exe
C:\Program Files\Futuremark\PCMark 10\PCMark10.exe
And to install the update, also:
C:\Windows\System32\msiexec.exe
PCMark 10 v1.0.1413 is available for download.
https://www.futuremark.com/benchmarks/pcmark10
Ryzen 1200 @ 4Ghz + GTX 1060.
I've never actually used PCMark before (at least never completed a test or thought it was useful before the test ended), this was back in the Windows XP days when I ran a Athlon XP-M + 6600GT both heavily overclocked (I'm a AMD guy but with NVIDIA GPU, Intel only for laptops but my next laptop will be my first ever AMD Ryzen one).
I find PCMark is very good at quickly testing the CPU for stability (of course I still prefer Prime95/24), I had to up the volts on my Ryzen because going from 3.75 to 3.95 requires 0.36v/50mhz but at 4Ghz and beyond it's 0.48v/50mhz, which means my predicted 4.2Ghz maximum for my motherboard is off but at least it still gets into Windows with CPU-Z validation.