Productivity and Web

Our previous sets of ‘office’ benchmarks have often been a mix of science and synthetics, so this time, we wanted to keep our office and productivity section purely based on real-world performance. The biggest update to our Office-focused tests for 2024 and beyond includes UL's Procyon software, which is the successor to PCMark. Procyon benchmarks office performance using Microsoft Office applications, and we've thrown in some timed compiler benchmarks such as Node.js, Linux, and PHP.

(1-1) UL Procyon Office: Word

(1-2) UL Procyon Office: Excel

(1-3) UL Procyon Office: Outlook

(2-4) Time Node.js Compilation 19.8.1

(2-1) JetStream 2.1 Benchmark

In our productivity section of the suite, both the Ryzen 9 9950X and Ryzen 9 9900X are competitive in all of the above tests. All four of the Zen 5 Ryzen 9000 series chips perform much better than the competition in the Java-based Jetstream benchmark. The Ryzen 9 9950X also decimates the competition in the timed Node.js compilation benchmark, with a 13% faster time than the next chip, the Ryzen 9 7900, which is interesting in itself. The Ryzen 9 9900X was marginally slower here, although there isn't much difference between this and the Ryzen 9 7900.

SPEC CPU 2017 Single And Multi-Threaded Results CPU Benchmark Performance: Encoding
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  • Khanan - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    “AMD has doubled the amount of L2 cache per core on Zen 5 to 1 MB, which is up from 512KB per Zen 4 core.”

    This isn’t right. L2 cache was already doubled from Zen 3 to Zen 4 to 1 MB, you already did this mistake a few times now.
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    You are correct! That has been fixed. Thank you.
  • eva02langley - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    I saw Steve and Steve still going strong with their nonsense. They were complaining again so I came here to have a REAL CPU review.

    Good old Anandtech is still setting the bar for what I should expect in a CPU review.
  • Khanan - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    I mean the chief reason for these architectures, as AMD uses Zen 5 chiplets also in the server, is the server or data center not desktops - that’s where the big money is. And after that laptops. So AMD doesn’t worry too much about those gaming YouTubers that hype everything as YouTubers always do despite it not making too much sense or having low relevance. What those want is the X3D processors anyway, those are for the gamers specifically, these aren’t as much, these are general architectures reused for the desktop (just not 1:1 in the laptop anymore).
  • eva02langley - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    You don't teach me anything, I know that already.

    My point is that they are complaining because they are focusing on games while a CPU IPC is NOT limited to gaming, on the contrary, it is a really small portion of it.

    Phoronix came out with a 17.5% geomean over the 7950x, well inline or even better than AMD's 16% IPC uplift.
  • thestryker - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    Keep in mind the only reason Phoronix saw that much uplift is the AVX512 change not because they're actually that much improved. They mentioned at the end of the review that they'll be doing further testing without AVX512 for comparisons.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, August 16, 2024 - link

    Greatly improved AVX-512 is more of an improvement than we've seen from some CPU releases.
  • coburn_c - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    Not true at all, GN repeatedly said don't buy these chips for gaming. YOU are complaining without focusing, and you look like a clown.
  • Gothmoth - Saturday, August 24, 2024 - link

    indeed he looks like a very dumb clown.....
  • Lonyo - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    GAMERS Nexus is focusing on GAME performance?

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