For those who acquire parity EDO RAM for this system, the BIOS is limiting the EDO read speed to x333. I brought this up in another thread and found some solutions to get it running at x222 in DOS and Windows (w98se, NT4, w2K). EDO vs. FPM on 430HX
I ran some benchmarks on the Proserva running two Kingston P233MMX chips. I ran several game benchmarks in Windows 98SE, which only uses one processor, and compared the results on the same system running Windows 2000 SP4. The same graphics card was used on both systems. I also compared the results to a Pentium Pro 512K chip running at 233 MHz using the same graphics card.
The data, plus some notes.
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The data in chart form.
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A chart showing which operating system, W2K or Win98, yield better benchmarks on the Proserva V Plus running dual Kingston P233MMX chips. The number of games which run faster on Win98SE vs. W2K is about split in half, but the game which prefers W2K buy at least 25% is Shogo, and the game which greatly prefers Win98SE is Unreal (classic). I don't know if the second CPU in W2K is having any benefit in the games. I did a brief check with GLQuake and Quake 2 to see if the results dropped if I set the CPU affinity to 0, but in both cases, the frame rate increased 1fps when the second CPU was disabled. This may be within the noise threshold though.
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Lastly, I compared the same games using my PPRO system at 233 MHz. Clock-for-clock, the PPRO excelled by a good margin, with strong exceptions being DOS-only games, such as Blood and Sega Rally. In this chart, I am also comparing results taken by user F2bnp, which ran another fantastic 233mmx, ppro233, and PII233 comparison here: Pentium Pro 233 vs Pentium MMX 233 vs Pentium II 233 . Since we both didn't use all of the same games, there will be some gaps in the chart. The two areas which struck me the most were by how much faster the PPRO was compared to the MMX and also by how much more benefit my results show favour for the PPRO compared to F2bnp's results. In his tests, he is using a Voodoo3, which as I understand it, is a lot less CPU demanding than the Geforce2MX400 that I used, particularly with slower CPUs like the P233MMX. So it seems that the GF2 really needs a PPRO or faster to come to life.
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Plan your life wisely, you'll be dead before you know it.