AMD's Athlon XP: Great performance, poor marketing
by Anand Lal Shimpi on October 9, 2001 7:00 AM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
Media Encoding Performance
We benchmarked three different types of media encoding: MPEG-4 video, MPEG-2 video and MP3 audio encoding. First we start out with MPEG-4 encoding under Flask.
We benchmarked Flask using the following settings:
1) The input video was a 320 x 240, non-interlaced, MPEG-1
file
2) The iDCT algorithm was set to autodetect thus selecting the fastest possible
algorithm for the particular processor
3) We used the Flask MPEG v0.60 preview with the official DivX 4.01 codec
available at www.divx.com
4) The output resolution was set at 352 x 288, filting quality set to the
highest possible, and audio was not decoded
5) The DivX 4.01 codec was selected in the configure output settings; since
audio wasn't being decoded we did not change any audio options
6) The encoding process was started and the frame rate at the end of the
process was recorded and reported below.
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Here you can see exactly how important the Palomino core enhancements are to the Athlon XP. The Athlon XP running at 1.4GHz is able to encode our MPEG-1 source file 10% faster than the previous generation Athlon, also at 1.4GHz. Even the 1.33GHz Athlon XP is able to outperform its 1.4GHz brother. This performance increase is mostly due to the Athlon XP's data prefetch which comes in handy with data intensive applications such as MPEG-4 encoding.
The Athlon XP 1.53GHz (1800+) gives the recently announced 2GHz Pentium 4 some hefty competition; it, too holding almost a 10% lead over Intel's flagship.
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The standings don't change much when looking at MPEG-2 video encoding performance. The only real difference being that since MPEG-2 encoding isn't as CPU bound with today's processors, the performance differences between the CPUs is vastly reduced. For example, the close to 10% difference between the Athlon XP 1.53GHz (1800+) and Pentium 4 2.0GHz is cut in half in this benchmark.
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For our MP3 encoding test we used version 3.89 of the Win32 LAME encoder binaries. We took a 170MB wav file and encoded it using the following commandline options: -v -V 0. This created a variable bit rate MP3, varying the bit rates between 160 kbps and 320 kbps. The end result was a 27MB MP3 file that took between 2 and 4 minutes to encode.
The Athlon XP isn't able to dominate as clearly in this benchmark as the Pentium 4 remains quite competitive with all of the new processors. The Palomino core enhancements help the Athlon XP out as the Athlon 1.4GHz processor is 6% slower than the 1.4GHz Athlon XP.
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