SPECviewperf
Measuring performance in the professional environment is quite a difficult task. There are numerous possibilities for the manner in which the particular graphics card will be used, and there is no one benchmark that can tell you how well a card will perform under all applications.
The Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation, commonly known as SPEC, managed to come up with a synthetic benchmark with real world implications. By running specific "viewsets" SPECviewperf can simulate performance under various applications. To be more accurate, according to SPEC, "A viewset is a group of individual runs of SPECviewperf that attempt to characterize the graphics rendering portion of an ISV's application." While this method is by no means capable of identifying the performance of a card in all situations, it does help to indicate the strengths and weaknesses of a particular setup.
SPECviewperf 6.1.1 currently features five viewsets: the Advanced Visualizer, the DesignReview, the Data Explorer, the Lightscape and the ProCDRS-02 viewset. Before each benchmark set we've provided SPEC's own description of that particular viewset so you can better understand what that particular viewset is measuring, performance-wise.
Each viewset is divided into a number of tests, ranging from 4 to 10 in quantity. These tests each stress a different performance element in the particular application that viewset is attempting to simulate. Since all applications focus on some features more than others, each one of these tests is weighted meaning that each test affects the final score differently, some more than others.
All results are reported in frames per second, so the higher the value, the better the performance is. The last result given for each of the viewsets is the WGM or Weighted Geometric Mean. This value is, as the name implies, the Weighted Geometric Mean of all of the test scores. The formula used to calculate the WGM is as follows:
With n being the number of tests in a viewset and w being the weight of each test expressed as a number between 0.0 and 1.0.
If you'd like to know more about why a Weighted Geometric Mean is used, SPEC has an excellent article detailing just why, here.
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evilpaul666 - Wednesday, October 14, 2020 - link
First!Railgun - Thursday, October 15, 2020 - link
Welp, if we’re going to be children...First is worst. Second’s best.
domboy - Thursday, October 15, 2020 - link
Reading this all these years later I realize several things. I miss- single slot cards
- having more than just two gpu vendors
- video cards with green PCBs
Good old PCI bus. I don't miss AGP though... glad PCIe came along to to allow one standard for all add-on cards.