Re: FYI performance improvement
"Kerry Brown" <kerry@kdbNOSPAMsys-tems.c*a*m> wrote in message
news

C6BBE4D-2C81-4E3D-97B2-1308EBCE9DEA@microsoft.com...
> "Adam Albright" <AA@ABC.net> wrote in message
> news:hs0u835sn2a0mp4pcc5e53iuoofogsvggk@4ax.com...
>> On Fri, 06 Jul 2007 19:14:53 -0700, Frank <fb@nospamm.cmm> wrote:
>>
>>>Mike wrote:
>>>> "Adam Albright" <AA@ABC.net> wrote in message
>>>> news:4rmt83h35m9hv5k3gk97lcm4r742slkrqe@4ax.com...
>>>>
>>>>> Sorry, but Microsoft's so-called "performance score" is for all
>>>>> practical purposes can be misleading.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> It's worse than misleading - it's a useless joke. It should be an
>>>> average, not the lowest score.
>>>>
>>>> Mike
>>>>
>>>
>>>No it shouldn't show an average. That's not the purpose of the score or
>>>the "Windows Experience Index". The lowest score denotes the weakest
>>>link in the system, which usually is the video card. That's important
>>>info because of the way Vista handles video as compared to xp and all
>>>before. The lowest scoring hardware can then be upgraded.
>>>Once upgraded, you must change your settings by updating and refreshing
>>>your score.
>>>It is useful only if you know what it is telling you.
>>>Frank
>>
>> Poor Frank, always needs to defend Microsoft. I keep wondering why.
>>
>> It makes sense to show scores for individual categories so you can see
>> what needs improvement but makes absolutely no sense to use the lowest
>> as the overall rating. That's like some kid taking ten tests and
>> scoring over 90 in each except for one where he scored 70 and that
>> becomes his final grade.
>>
>>
>
>
> The lowest score is the bottleneck for that computer. It is a much better
> indication of how the computer will perform than an average.
>
> --
> Kerry Brown
> Microsoft MVP - Shell/User
> http://www.vistahelp.ca
>
>
Concur. When one is sitting at one's computer, it's the -perceived-
performance that matters most, imho. Throughout Windows' timeline, video has
always been the biggest bottleneck to perceived performance, again, imho.
And, as we all know, perceived performance is directly related to what it is
one is using the computer for. Mega database queries are going to benefit
from faster CPU's and faster hard disks. Video is less of a bottleneck in
that situation. But in "average joe" day-to-day usage, the performance of
the video subsystem is, generally, going to have far more of an impact on
perceived performance. That is, of course, unless your hard disk gets a 1.3
rating... ;-)
Lang