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Thanks for the reply to my original post. I am a Windows user so the G5 optimizations won't do me much good.
I was looking for the Holy Grail: a Rosetta stone for Windows benchmarks and trying to relate what each of them might mean as far as suitability of a given system component to the faster and better use of ArchiCAD.
I have assumed rightly or wrongly that ArchiCAD would ideally like a fast hard drive that's dutifully defragmented very regularly, lots and lots of RAM and not necessarily the fastest CPU. But how to navigate the minefield of specs and numbers?
What seems to be making the difference in the chip architecture these days is less the "speed" of the chip but rather the size of the "on-die" cache (more cache is really spelled more cash!!!!!). Understanding what the benchmarks mean might help me to understand whether or not an EE chip is really worth $1200USD more than its nonEE cousin.
I purchased a new system today and did so after much agonizing in the high performance or "gamer" laptop marketplace. During a frenetic two weeks of websearching I found myself in discussion groups with people who are using these machines to play games and I wasn't certain as whether or not they really knew what the benchmarking numbers meant save for higher is better.
A number of the better known hardware review websites pander to this kind of mentality I think. One would presume that they expect the reader to understand what a higher score in Wolfenstein means already. To the newb like me it really means nothing.
However, I did find a vendor site that seems to use mostly the same benchmark tests as everyone else, but the reviews they post describe which part of the system a particular test is taxing. While I still don't know whether or not a high ActiveX 9 score is important to me or whether or not a high framerate score in UnReal Tournament is going to make my navigation in the 3D window any more enjoyable, I was at least able to follow the thread of the discussion. For what its worth and if anyone is interested have a look at the "in the labs" section at
http://www.gamepc.com
The benchmarks suggest that the big cache Pentiums (or Pentium Extreme Edition aka Gallatin) do make a difference over their not so extreme cousins (Prescott and Northwood). AMD CPUs have a completely different architecture and a different view of what many GHz means. If I'm right this means that my 2.4GHz Newcastle will go head to head quite nicely with the 3.4GHz Sir Gallatin. For half the price.
The benchmarks also suggest that a CAD workstation grade video card is not necessary to run ArchiCAD. If a gamer video card that has the same hardware configuration as a board costing 2.5x as much and is different only because the maker supplies custom drivers for AutoCAD, Cinema 4D, etc. then why bother. Until someone at Graphisoft writes these drivers there's not much reason to buy one.
So, rather than wringing ones hands or giving up and buying an Apple G5, using ArchiCAD or buying hardware for ArchiCAD should be more fun. Maybe the IT guys know less about specifying hardware for AC than the skateboarders. Maybe buying a computer should be more fun! Maybe the IT guys are really having more fun than they should and not telling you about it! What can your IT guy tell you about low latency RAM anyway. Probably less than your kids, or nieces and nephews.
In the end I have decided against the uber portable. It wasn't necessarily anbout money because I went out and spent $500USD more than I was originally prepared to for the the ultra sk8terboi laptop - minus the automotive paint job and the extra tattoo.
Instead I managed to come away with a computer the size of a big shoebox. It comes with a fishing tackle sized carrying bag. And to celebrate my sense of relief at not having to do any more research I decided to opt for the uber big widescreen LCD monitor instead. As one reviewer said, "wide is the new black". This rig should be easy on the eyes in more than one sense of the word.
The Shuttle )also black) is as portable as I will ever need it to be - I would use it outside the office hooked up to a projector for demonstrations, presentations and training sessions. Back in the office it will purr alongside a widescreen monitor.
The laptop market is in a very big state of flux as of this week. PCI-Express cards are about to make their entrance on the Pentium laptop scene. The promise of PCI-Express if I understand correctly is that it will allow you to upgrade the video card in the same way that you can swap out RAM and CPU. The video cards seem to be the most rapidly advancing components in the hardware world and so this would make some sense.
But, its way too new and still way too expensive. The people who seemed the most excited were the gamer boyz and gurlz who appear to be having mom and dad foot the bill, buy the birthday present or furnish the dorm room with one of these monsters.
I empathize: my father bought me my first computer in 1984 - pre-Bill Gates. It was billed as a portable which was important as I was heading off to university. In reality it was the size of a footlocker and probably cost close to the same amount in today's dollars as the Voodoo Envy 780.
To all of these kids, enthusiastic, wonderful, terribly opinionated hardware fanatics who should be in the library but are instead clacking away at reports on their benchmarking scores and uploading pictures of them being taken out of their packing boxes, I say thank you.
I would also say that what they've really taught me is to stop benchmarking the game and start playing the game. Hardware isn't where its at. Its the software that rocks!
Yo Yo Dude!
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