Señor Ventura wrote on 2025-11-17, 06:21:
[...]
P.D: What is the difference in terms of perfomance between dedicated and integrated?, Some thread about this?.
That rather depends on what you're trying to run on it. With Windows games, impact will usually be severe, but how severe depends on what is bottlenecking your system in a particular game and what settings you're running at.
For reference here are figures I got in some benchmarks 20-odd years ago:
http://dionb.eu/chipset1.html
The most relevant column is probably the P-INT MEM. A 5598 board (PC Chips M537) using its integrated VGA scores 40 points on this synthetic benchmark using EDO or 47 using SDRAM. Add a dedicated VGA card and that jumps to
73 or 78 respectively, so a performance hit of about 40%. If you compare results for the Via MVP4, the other chipset I benched with integrated VGA, you'll see very similar SDRAM scores (in fact the older SiS 5598 scores better than the newer MVP4): this is not a chipset-specific issue but an inevitable result of using integrated VGA on a platform with insufficient bandwidth to feed both at the same time (I would sorely have liked to bench an ALi Aladdin 7 dual-channel SDRAM board, but was never able to source one). Or put another way, a P200 with integrated VGA will perform similarly to a P120 with dedicated VGA in games that are simultaneously CPU and VGA intensive.
Now, this benchmark specifically tests memory bandwidth, which is the Achilles' heel of integrated chipsets, so this is a worst-case scenario. However when playing games that stress CPU and VGA performance at the same time, you will come close to this. If a game is only really stressing one of the two, the impact will be smaller. You have the hardware, do your own benchmark if you want to be sure with your software in your situations.
Personally, I'd be far more concerned about memory bandwidth than HDD size, particularly when the larger HDD is totally not period correct. In 1998 when most 5598 systems were sold, 8GB was a very large HDD. But in 1998 already people knew using a dedicated VGA card would hugely improve performance. Although tbh, a system with 5598 isn't a performance system anyway: if I wanted a fast So7 system, I'd not base it on that chipset anyway, so I'd probably leave the 5598 in its vanilla state.