Testing with Adobe Photoshop 2021 sees a 5% performance improvement for the R5 3600 when using Windows 11, which was interesting to see, especially given there was no performance improvement with the 5950X. That said, the compression results are interesting as the Ryzen 9 5950X did suffer a 7% performance loss due to the 元 bug, which of course, has now been addressed and with the fix Windows 11 and 10 are the same. Moving on to 7-Zip results, we find for decompression work that there’s little difference between the two operating systems. The R5 3600 was also similar though we do observe a 3% improvement with Windows 11, which I’d argue is quite insignificant. It’s the same for the Blender Open Data benchmark, especially when looking at the Ryzen 9 5950X which sees less than a 1% deviation in performance. Basically it doesn’t matter which version of Windows you use, performance is going to be much the same and this was true even prior to the 元 cache latency fix.
Moving on to Cinebench, we find some pretty boring results, though not entirely unexpected.
#Screenseven luxor evolved windows 10 windows 10#
Thankfully AMD and Microsoft have now addressed that issue and therefore Windows 10 and Windows 11 should be comparable in that respect. However, here you can see just how bad 元 latency was prior to the fix with the 5950X’s 元 latency pushed out to 36ns, which is roughly 3x greater than what it should be. Starting with AIDA64 cache and memory results, we see no real difference between the various configurations when comparing DRAM latency, L1 cache latency and L2 cache latency. Let’s now get into the graphs… Application Performance All results are based on a 3-run average and in some instances we powered down the entire system between runs to avoid caching. We’ll be looking at application, gaming, storage and load time performance.