You've probably seen our coverage and Watch Mother Exchange 7 XXX Movietests over the past few weeks on the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities, or more specifically the performance drops you can expect from the patches that address these issues. We've already covered what you can expect on modern desktop systems, however today we'll be diving into the mobile side of things to see how Meltdown and Spectre patches affect ultraportable laptops.
At this stage, patches for laptops are much more widely available than on desktops, especially from big name manufacturers. This makes it easier to test older hardware platforms, so today we'll be looking at the impact on both the latest 8th gen Intel U-series parts, along with a 3 year old 5th gen Broadwell-based laptop.
Both of the laptops I'm using for this test are Dell XPS 13, which should be representative of most premium ultraportable systems with 15W CPUs inside. The newer XPS 13 9360 model is powered by a Core i7-8550U with 8GB of RAM and a 256GB Samsung PM961 PCIe SSD. The older Broadwell model (XPS 13 9343) comes with a Core i5-5200U, 8GB of RAM, and a 256GB Samsung PM851 SATA SSD.
As with desktops, patching these laptops requires two separate updates: a BIOS update specific to the device that tackles Spectre vulnerabilities, along with a recent Windows Update that kills Meltdown and supports the Spectre BIOS patch.
We've tested the laptops in two configurations: before either update was applied and after both updates were applied. This will give us a good idea of how the performance differs between an unpatched system and a fully protected system (with the current set of patches).
We should note that the performance differences you see here may not apply to all laptops with this sort of hardware inside, but it should give a good indication of how these patches affect a more performance-constrained system.
Let's kick things off by looking at PCMark, which is a set of workloads designed to simulate real world tasks. Across the main PCMark 8 tests, there isn't a significant impact from the Meltdown and Spectre patches, with performance declining by just a few percent in most cases. This is margin of error type stuff, and for most cases won't be a noticeable difference in performance.
Cinebench R15 is an interesting one as we do start to see some performance degradation. The 8th gen platform seems to be more heavily affected here, dropping by seven percent in the multi-thread workload and three percent in the single-thread workload.
Broadwell was still affected, but the difference was negligible in the single-thread test and just four percent in multi-threaded.
Cinebench isn't the only rendering test that's been affected. While rendering x264 videos in a two-pass encode, pass one performance dropped on both Kaby Lake Refresh and Broadwell, to the tune of 8 and 4 percent respectively. The more intensive pass 2, where most of the actual encoding occurs, isn't significantly slowed on the i7-8550U but does suffer a marginal decrease on the i5-5200U.
Interestingly, rendering an x265 video in Handbrake with a single pass actually improves marginally in performance after the update, particularly on Broadwell where the render time is cut by 5 percent. So it's not necessarily every rendering workload that is affected by the patches.
The final video rendering test I have is Premiere, which is affected by the Spectre and Meltdown patches. On the i7-8550U, both the Lumetri-effect enhanced test and the non-Lumetri test declined by around five percent, although the performance decline is slightly higher on the i5-5200U.
On a performance constrained device like an ultraportable, seeing any performance slowdowns in Premiere is a big deal as most of these laptops run a fine line between being capable of editing videos, and delivering a choppy mess.
Game of Thrones: Jon Snow may be King in the North, but he's a bad leaderRobert Downey Jr. hitting you up for cash? It's probably a scam.Amazon is lowering prices at Whole Foods starting this MondayWatch a very cute kid crash a TV segment about milk allergiesJoe Biden's new book will make you nostalgic for simpler timesTaylor Swift's Ticketmaster scam is why she's capitalism's favorite pop starNew Tesla software hints that Elon Musk may be working on a musicAustin movie theater is hosting a clownTom Cruise's fake butt is the internet's newest conspiracy theoryMartin Shkreli trolls reporters by buying web domains in their namesSquirrel briefly makes NFL preseason game tolerableTaylor Swift's 'Look What You Made Me Do' video: Watch previewNew Tesla software hints that Elon Musk may be working on a musicThe dark side of optimism: How the trait you value most could be ruining youTaylor Swift fans discovered her new album details before she could unveil them herselfA hilarious new Taylor Swift meme reminds everyone Beyonce is the queenHow will Jon Snow find out about his parents on 'Game of Thrones'?Squirrel briefly makes NFL preseason game tolerableHurricane Harvey poses an unprecedented flood threat to TexasUse neuroscience to convince your boss to let you nap at work Jimmy Buffett was more than Margaritaville Elon Musk blames the ADL for X's problems, floats lawsuit Let’s All Go Down to the Bridge and Get Our Teeth Pulled by Dan Piepenbring The Morning News Roundup for November 18, 2014 Berlin’s Boulevard of Broken Dreams Winner of the American Book Award by Dan Piepenbring Local reporter shredding while delivering news is a delight to watch Emma, Cover to Cover by Dan Piepenbring Squeaky Wheels Satan Comes to Oklahoma City The Morning News Roundup for November 4, 2014 Jonah Hill sets boundary with followers, asks them not to comment on his body We need to talk about Jason Sudeikis' Twitter likes Gertie Turns One Hundred The Poet Bandit How the internet paid tribute to the late Jimmy Buffett The Morning News Roundup for November 20, 2014 Remembering the Absolute Sound Microsoft is finally killing off WordPad after nearly 30 years Why I Loved Wayne Newton’s “The Entertainer”
1.9545s , 10133.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Mother Exchange 7 XXX Movie】,Prosperous Times Information Network