Script Benchmark: Write a Million Numbers
Here's a fairly recent (orig Nov 2002) browser speed test. (Since it is an optimized test, it is not necessarily a pure benchmark of JavaScript speed.)
In the classical fashion of a JavaScript test, it writes one million numbers, which actually helps test not only the script execution speed (which is a value displayed in milliseconds), but also the browser display speed and computer rendering time (the difference between the displayed value and the actual physical time before the entire list of one million numbers is visible).
For comparison, a current Windows computer (2.4 GHz) can finish the test in 5.032 seconds (IE 6.0).
http://www.myersdaily.org/joseph/jav...n-numbers.html
As this test may consume one minute of time on some computers, caution is advised before clicking on the link.
In the classical fashion of a JavaScript test, it writes one million numbers, which actually helps test not only the script execution speed (which is a value displayed in milliseconds), but also the browser display speed and computer rendering time (the difference between the displayed value and the actual physical time before the entire list of one million numbers is visible).
For comparison, a current Windows computer (2.4 GHz) can finish the test in 5.032 seconds (IE 6.0).
http://www.myersdaily.org/joseph/jav...n-numbers.html
As this test may consume one minute of time on some computers, caution is advised before clicking on the link.
Comments
Does this test the browser, or Javascript?
Seems kinda fast compared to the other findings.
Dual 867 G4 / 1 gig RAM / OS 10.2.6 / Safari 1.0 v85
-- Mark
Camino: 9820
Safari: 12711
OW4.5: 12759
IE: 63344
Just what I expected. I would expect a dual 1.25 or 1.42 to post ~5000 in Camino. Verification?
Netscape 7.0 - 29,774
I.E. 5.2 83,000+
Safari - 14,237
--> Netscape 7.1 8551 (with CPU monitor running)
Looking at the CPU monitor while running this test seemed like there wasn't much threading of the task as only one CPU was dominant at anyone time during the run with Netscape 7.1. The situation was different with Safari as both CPU's were sharing the load thereby explaining the lower times.
12822 on a Mac Powerbook 800 (DVI) w/ 1 GB RAM running Safari 1.0 and OS 10.2.6
2359 on a P4/3.2 GHz, 800 MHz FSB, running Windows XP Pro and IE 6.
-- Mark
Originally posted by Fluffy
DVD_Junkie, what do you get under Camino, if you don't mind my asking? It was at least 25% faster on my machine than Safari.
Interesting question.
with IE 5.2 I get 43565
with Camino 0.7 : 6827 hmmmm
Camino 0.7: 14079
Safari 1.0(v85): 13669
G4 400 Sawtooth, 512 mb ram, OSX 10.2.6, Safari 1.0. 5-10% CPU being used by other programs:
27771
Originally posted by jeromba
6468 on a G5@1.6 with Safari v85.5
Interesting that this is faster than the DP 1.25GHz with Safari 1.0- it scored 7950.
13786 on Safari
98324 on IE 5.2
Athlon XP 2800+ 512 MB RAM Win XP
2383 on IE 6.0
The ancient pc I use at work...
Pentium 2 400 128 MB RAM Win 2K
16603 on IE 5.0
Originally posted by AngryAngel
Interesting that this is faster than the DP 1.25GHz with Safari 1.0- it scored 7950.
Why? Safari uses only one processor, the G5 has better FPU (actually, double FPU), and the results seem to scale almost linearly with the processor frequency.
Win XP -- IE 6
P4 1.6 (256mb)