SYSMark 2004 Performance Summary

These scores represent the overall performance of each component of SYSMark 2004.

SYSMark 2004

Seagate comes in behind the other three 3.0Gbps drives in overall Internet Content Creation performance at 205-206 ticks on the graph. We are not putting much emphasis on this test anymore because of its CPU intensive nature. Instead, we are focusing more on the Office Productivity test suite.

To recap, here's what happens in the entire Office Productivity suite:
"In this scenario, the office productivity user creates a marketing presentation and supporting documents for a new product. The user receives email containing a collection of documents in a compressed file. The user reviews his email and updates his calendar while a virus checking software scans the system. The corporate web site is viewed and the user begins creating the collateral documents. The user also accesses a database and runs some queries. A collection of documents are compressed. The queries' results are imported into a spreadsheet and used to generate graphical charts. The user then transcribes a document. Once the document has all the necessary pieces in place, the user changes it into a portable format for easy and secure distribution. The user edits and adds elements to a slide show template. Finally, the user looks at the results of his work (both the slide show and the portable document) in an Internet browser."

SYSMark 2004

SYSMark 2004

Seagate's performance here is not the best. Overall, SYSMark 2004 rates it at 186-187 marks, which brings it half way down the list and far from the other 3.0Gbps drives and just barely shows improvement over the 400GB 7200.8 unit.

Overall System Performance - SYSMark 2004 WinBench 99 - Transfer Rate Test
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  • Googer - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    Once again NCQ did not aide these drives to deliver higher performance. It is my speculation that we will need an Operating System that can take advantage of NCQ before we could see any performance gains from it. Untill then Keep it disabled.
  • KristopherKubicki - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    NCQ is very vendor specific. Some drives benefit more than others from it.

    Kristopher
  • PuravSanghani - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    NCQ is actually beneficial in server applications where disk requests are occuring very frequently as opposed to a desktop PC scenario where disk access is not as critical.

    We are trying to research ways to benchmark this but if any of you have any suggestions, please feel free to send an email with any ideas you have.

    Thanks,

    Purav
  • Byte - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    with an icredible 5 year warranty i exclusively use seagate. Suprisingly i've never had a chance to test out Seagates replacement steps. I've returned dozens of WDs, Maxtors, and IBMs. Looks like seagates on a role.
  • Griswold - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    Such is life. I've seen quite a few Seagates die, yet, never had a problem with WD in more than 10 years of using them.

    One persons experience is hardly statistically correct. :)
  • DrZoidberg - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    I own a 200gig Seagate 7200.7 SATA, and though the synthetic benchmarks like Winstone, Sysmark, Seagate is like at middle of pack most of the time, when it comes to like Real world tests like loading game levels Seagate is generally faster, sometimes even better than WD Raptor. The File zip times are pretty good as well.

    I'm always suprised at this, something that is average in synthetic benchmarks to do quite well in real world tests.
  • imaheadcase - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    I think its time to start shipping hardrive coolers standard with drive purchases like they do CPUs. hehe
  • Scrogneugneu - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    Well, I still wait the moment I'm supposed to say "Oh dear God this hard disk is fast!"...


    It qualifies in the middle of the disks, and under some conditions (in fact, only during the DOOM III loading test) stands out... but it falls short (VERY short) of impressing me...


    Did you ever noticed that, for example, during the zip test, the vast majority of the disks differ only by 4 or 5 seconds on a minute of encoding? And in the case of unzipping, it's down to 1 or 2 seconds? Where am I supposed to notice the greater speed?


    "I got the fastest hard drive in the world, I can zip my 300 MB files 3 seconds faster than you! You're jaleous, aren't you?"
  • PrinceGaz - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    Yes, after the earlier promotional article about this drive, and now the title "Mouthwatering Benchmarks", I was expecting to be blown away by the blisteringly fast speed of the drive. It seemed pretty average really, nothing special at all apart from a high capacity (matched by a high price).
  • blackbrrd - Monday, October 24, 2005 - link

    I completely agree, having a title like "Seagate 7200.9 500GB: Mouthwatering Benchmarks" for this review is just wrong. Anandtech might get more hits in the short run, but looses credibility while doing so.

    I really don't like review sites that have misleading titles.

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