Paint.NET x64
Website: Paint.NET
This is the 64-bit version of the popular free image editing software, Paint.NET. It's not as advanced as something like Adobe Photoshop CS3 or Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo X2, but it does serve well for most image editing tasks.
We used the PDNBench script to test the processing times for a range of images and filters. The multi-threaded software also takes advantage of multi-core processors quite effectively.
For more information on what the benchmark script entails, please see
this thread on the Paint.NET forums.
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DFI 790FX-B M2RSH
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MSI DKA790GX Platinum
Seconds (lower is better)
Paint.NET sees a slight performance advantage for DFI, although the difference is very small between the two boards.
GIMP Image Editing
Website: GUN Image Manipulation Program (GIMP)
Our GIMP image editing test simulates how well a PC can manipulate a collection of large digital photos, and to achieve a low time requires a PC with a powerful CPU, plenty of quick memory and efficient hard disk drive access.
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DFI 790FX-B M2RSH
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MSI DKA790GX Platinum
Seconds (lower is better)
In GIMP, the DFI board takes quite a hit and falls behind by almost five percent. We found this result consistent with the first and second DFI boards we had, and over multiple runs too.
AutoMKV x.264 Encoding
Website: Doom9
We tested x.264 compression using AutoMKV version 0.97.1 to compress a 1.1GB DVD VOB file into 350MB MP4 file using a two-pass encode and we used a 112kbps LAME encoder to compress the audio. The whole process is dependent on both single and multi-core performance and the entire encoding time was recorded.
There's quite a shift to using MKV or MP4 wrappers for x264 content now, especially for movie content and those in the large anime fansubbing community. x264 doesn't have the same SSE enhancements as some other codecs, but the benefits of extra cache and better memory performance should still show notable improvements.
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DFI 790FX-B M2RSH
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MSI DKA790GX Platinum
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Seconds (lower is better)
In x.264 encoding with AutoMKV, the DFI is marginally faster on average, edging out a two percent lead over the MSI.
Handbrake H.264 Encoding
Website: HandBrake
Our test uses Handbrake - an open-source, GPL-licensed, multiplatform, multithreaded video transcoder, available for MacOS X, Linux and Windows - to encode a high resolution MPEG-2 video using the H.264 codec. This primarily tests multi-threaded CPU and memory subsystem performance.
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DFI 790FX-B M2RSH
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MSI DKA790GX Platinum
Seconds (lower is better)
However, with the Handbreak x.264 encode, it drops that performance advantage and there's not much to call between the two boards overall here.
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