Originally posted by Orionds
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Gaming Benchmarks: Windows 7 vs. Ubuntu Linux
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Originally posted by stan View PostLooks like Nvidious cares more about their Windows users than their Linux users. Now what are the Nvidious fanboys going to say about their beloved blob?
Shoo. Go away.
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Originally posted by stan View PostLooks like Nvidious cares more about their Windows users than their Linux users. Now what are the Nvidious fanboys going to say about their beloved blob?
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Originally posted by stan View PostLooks like Nvidious cares more about their Windows users than their Linux users. Now what are the Nvidious fanboys going to say about their beloved blob?
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Originally posted by liam View PostNow, it is my understanding that Windows no longer has to convert all OpenGL instructions to Direct3D, thus they can get similar performance, but to beat Linux by this much... again, I am guessing this is b/c these tests aren't making extensive use of double precision.
Does anyone know something concrete?
Best/Liam
Every OpenGL activity is care of the video card driver. ATi and Nvidia have their fully optimized OpenGL drivers that directly call the hardware, instead less important video chip vendors are used to do OpenGL wrapping to D3D (like SiS with their integrated video cards).
With Vista and 7 things changed to kill OpenGL, but I think video chip vendors have found the way long time ago to avoid stupid Microsoft impositions.
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I went on and ran the benchmarks myself to check my doubts about Ubuntu having unfairly compositing enabled in Michael's benchmarks.
As my operating systems I've got Windows 7 Professional and Arch Linux (using Unstable repo), both 64-bit. Arch has Linux 2.6.35 kernel and latest beta drivers from Nvidia, Windows 7 drivers were whatever the Windows Update fed me. I forgot to install the latest Windows drivers from nvidia.com, sorry. For the hardware part, my system consists of an Intel Core 2 Duo E7200, a GeForce 7900 GS and 4 GBs of RAM.
I chose to do Lightsmark 2008 and Nexuiz. The Nexuiz benches were ran with 32-bit binaries due to the fact Alientrap doesn't supply us with a 64-bit build for Windows. As the benchmark I executed timedemo using a built-in demo "demo1" (run command 'timedemo demos/demo1' in the Nexuiz console).
I'm a bit suspicious of the validity of my Lightsmark results because the benchmark did run in windowed mode on Linux but in fullscreen on Windows. Therefore I manually changed my desktop resolution to be that of the test's and that resulted as a slightly higher FPS. Dunno.
The results were:
*** Lightsmark 2008
*** Drivers: 0x AA, 0x AF forced
Windows: 96.2 fps
Linux: 98.7
Linux*: 102.6
*** Lightsmark 2008
*** Drivers: 4x AA, 4x AF forced
Windows: 72.4 fps
Linux: 72.3
Linux*: 77.2
* Resolution/fullscreen correction
*** Nexuiz: default settings
*** Drivers: 0x AA, 0x AF forced
Seconds -- fps min | avg | max
Windows: 31 -- 39 | 64 | 121
Linux: 30 -- 39 | 68 | 122
*** Nexuiz: maximum detail ('ultra' preset + everything else maxed)
*** Drivers: auto settings
Seconds -- fps min | avg | max
Windows: 120 -- 9 | 17 | 32
Linux: 114 -- 10 | 18 | 36
*** Nexuiz: 'normal' preset
*** Drivers: auto settings
Windows: 48 -- 26 | 40 | 67
Linux: 30 -- 38 | 67 | 121 ??? This must've been a Nexuiz preset mismatch, insane difference.
Short: Linux won every benchmark. I ran all the benchmarks 2-3 times and the differences were minimal and nothing was left for interpretations.
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Originally posted by curfew View PostI went on and ran the benchmarks myself to check my doubts about Ubuntu having unfairly compositing enabled in Michael's benchmarks.
Again, if this is a huge issue, file a bug report with Ubuntu. Until Ubuntu changes their policy, Michael won't (and shouldn't) touch the setting in his benchmarks.
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Originally posted by locovaca View PostIt is not unfair if Ubuntu ships with Compositing enabled, which they do. Just because they have not implemented a disable on demand feature as Windows has speaks more to Microsoft's tuning of their OS for a wider audience than Ubuntu.
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Originally posted by locovaca View PostIt is not unfair if Ubuntu ships with Compositing enabled, which they do. Just because they have not implemented a disable on demand feature as Windows has speaks more to Microsoft's tuning of their OS for a wider audience than Ubuntu.
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