Keeping Atom in Perspective

I ran one last benchmark on Ion: SYSMark 2007.

I chose SYSMark 2007 instead of going back to an older benchmark for one reason in particular: people seem to be putting too much faith in what Atom can do. These results here are useful for two things: 1) to showcase the performance of NVIDIA’s Ion platform vs. a standard Atom + 945G, and 2) to remind everyone what sort of performance Atom provides today.

The desktop CPU in the chart above is an Intel Celeorn 430. It is a 65nm single-core Conroe based processor with 1MB of L2 cache running at 1.80GHz. This is a horribly crippled version of the Core 2 processor we all fell in love with over two years ago. A single-core Atom, what’s found in all shipping Atom notebooks/netbooks, is less than half the speed of this processor running a modern day workload.

This isn’t a slight against Atom. Intel’s Atom is an excellent processor. It’s small, extremely power efficient, cool and well architected. But it delivers the performance of a lower-end mainstream notebook from over four years ago. Keep that in mind people, especially before you go out and spend $600 or $700 on a PC based on Atom.

Intel also sees netbooks as $299 - $349 machines. At those price points, Atom delivers good enough performance. But start approaching $1000 and it starts becoming silly very fast. Spend $200 - $300 on a CPU and you’ll easily have 4 - 5x the performance of an Atom in modern tasks.

Atom’s low power consumption gives it the ability to cheaply fit into small form factors. You pay a small premium for that advantage, but let’s not forget that Atom was never designed to be a notebook/desktop replacement. And Ion doesn’t change that either.

Ion’s Performance: Generally Faster Power Consumption & Final Words
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  • sikahr - Thursday, February 5, 2009 - link

    It'2 not about money.
    It'2 not about weak INTC's chip combo.
    It's about platforms. AMD&Intel have whole platform to sell.
    NVidia haven't.
    Soon there will be no entry level processors from Intel&AMD without integrated GPU in CPU.

    So, to resume it:

    Nvidia is out of chipset business very soon.

    You can call me nutjob or moron, but that is how things really are.
    Look, I don't hate Nvidia, all my 3d video cards till now are Nvidia, but this is reality about future of chipsets.
  • chrnochime - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    You've just made yourself a fanboy by calling someone a moron.

    So what if they have 1.3b? Intel has tons more money and they can crush Nvidia anytime they want.

  • Hrel - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    What the hell is going on with that guy's face in the Casino Royal picture??!! It looks like his face is morphing with male genitalia???
  • yyrkoon - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    "The GeForce 9400M is a far better chipset than Intel’s 945G. It should be, it’s a good four years newer. But I do wonder if we’ve taken things a little too far here. I wonder if Ion actually has too much GPU and not enough CPU? Don’t get me wrong, I like Ion; I’d like to have it over a standard 945G platform. I’m just not sure what I’d do with it."

    I'd use it on our RE system ( renewable energy; Solar/Wind ), and worry less about how much power I am drawing while watching SD video at night. Also perfect for many other applications such as low res gaming, IRC, Photo editing with CS2/CS3, web browsing, and the list goes on and . . .

    Bottom line; Whether you're on grid, or off grid ( RE, or utility power ) you're going to use less power and worry less about either your battery bank going down too far, or paying too much for power for doing most mundane tasks.

    Right now, I use a AM2 mini ATX board with nv 6150 graphics, an AM2 1210 underclocked to 1Ghz, and undervolted to .80v, and still use ~75W with a 19" WS LCD. It'll play some modest games well @ 1024x728, it'll run CS3 well enough. However, I suspect an ION system would handle all this just as good or better while cutting another 20-30W power consumption.

    Now . . . here is to hoping that "we" will see some good ~100W 80Plus power supplies around the corner. That is, assuming OEMs give us a desktop/barebones options.
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    As mentioned, these power numbers don't seem exactly impressive. Assuming the quoted numbers are correct, plenty of laptops can match/beat those. Plus, they already include the power supplies. Assuming your monitor draws around 30W, you could easily use that with a laptop and get 40-45W total at idle, and maybe 60 W at load. Plus, it would probably not be nearly as painful as Atom to run Photoshop on.
  • iwodo - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    Am i the only one who thinks there is something wrong with that Idle Power?

    You mentioned 1 Atom Core being disabled, is that re enabled during other benchmark?

    I cant wait to see how a 40nm Geforce 9400 will do.

    Only If Atom is 64Bit Capable. I could see new Mac Mini coming.
    Honestly I think Ion is capable of doing 95% of what i do day to day on my computer.
  • sprockkets - Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - link

    The Atom is 64-bit capable and is hyperthreading enabled. Going from a C2D to an Atom is a downgrade for the Mac Mini.

    But that won't stop Apple from putting a positive spin on that...
  • Casper42 - Tuesday, February 3, 2009 - link

    You guys crack me up.

    "We didn’t have an external Blu-ray drive so this was the best method of being able to watch a Blu-ray on the machine"

    1) Grab a SATA to eSATA converter that comes with every Gigabyte Mobo you have reviewed in the last 3 years and use that to connect a SATA BluRay Drive (I dont think they even make PATA Blu-Ray) to one of the eSATA ports on the Ion
    2) Hook up a power supply from a nearby ATX machine OR use a single drive power supply like the ones that come with the USB to SATA Adapter most good PC Techs keep in their bag (http://c1.neweggimages.com/NeweggImage/productimag...">http://c1.neweggimages.com/NeweggImage/productimag...

    Problem solved!
  • anandtech02148 - Tuesday, February 3, 2009 - link

    we're good to go for summer browsing. decent gpu is perfectly match for widescreen web browsing. sounds like a fun hobby to build one of these little toy.
  • UNCjigga - Tuesday, February 3, 2009 - link

    Any chance AMD will slip you a full-on Neo "Yukon" reference platform for comparison testing?

    Also, will the Ion chipset support VIA's Nano?

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