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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MSI P45 Platinum
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Abit IX38 QuadGT
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XFX nForce 780i SLI
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Asus P5Q Deluxe
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MSI P35 Diamond
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EVGA nForce 750i SLI
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Gigabyte GA-X48T-DQ6
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Gigabyte GA-EP45-DQ6
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Gigabyte GA-EP35-DS4
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22.0
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22.0
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22.2
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22.2
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22.2
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22.3
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22.3
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22.3
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22.5
Time in seconds (lower is better)
The Paint.NET performance is again pretty consistent with the rest of the pack, and it may appear a
fraction on the slow side on average, but it still keeps up with the DDR3 Gigabyte X48T in this test.
AutoMKV x264 Encoding
Website: Doom9
We tested x264 compression using AutoMKV version 0.95c and 64-bit x264 encoder 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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Gigabyte GA-X48T-DQ6
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Gigabyte GA-EP45-DQ6
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MSI P45 Platinum
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MSI P35 Diamond
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Asus P5Q Deluxe
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XFX nForce 780i SLI
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Abit IX38 QuadGT
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Gigabyte GA-EP35-DS4
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EVGA nForce 750i SLI
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768.0
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777.0
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779.0
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779.0
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784.0
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785.0
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787.0
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801.0
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802.0
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Time in seconds (lower is better)
In a more system rounded test the EVGA nForce 750i SLI FTW tanks and hits the bottom of the table, dropping over 15 seconds to the XFX nForce 780i SLI and is over 20 seconds slower than the fastest, latest P45 boards in comparison.
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