July 20, 2022
New and improved benchmarks
While replacing the system battery in my HP Slimline 290, I added a 4 GB stick of Crucial DDR4 2400 MHz RAM and a 500 GB Samsung 980 NVMe SSD. The whole thing, including a CR2032 battery, an M.2 screw kit, and a Torx driver cost a little over $100 from Amazon (and Home Depot).
With 8 GB of RAM installed, memory usage while running all of my basic programs (Chrome, Word, Notepad++ and JWPce) fell in half to around 40 percent. More importantly, thanks to the dual-channel architecture, filling both banks of DDR4 RAM doubled memory throughput.
Doubling the RAM noticeably improved the overall performance of the system. But switching to an SSD is like upgrading from floppy disks to a HDD back in the day. Over ten times faster right off the bat.
With 8 GB of RAM installed, memory usage while running all of my basic programs (Chrome, Word, Notepad++ and JWPce) fell in half to around 40 percent. More importantly, thanks to the dual-channel architecture, filling both banks of DDR4 RAM doubled memory throughput.
I cloned the HDD drive using the Samsung Data Migration tool. After taking the recommended precautions—running chkdsk, deleting temporary files, and shutting down extraneous programs—it completed without a hitch. All I had to do was select the new boot drive in BIOS and I was ready to go.4 GB DDR4 RAM (2400 MHz CL17) Novabench 13015 MB/s WinSat 13313 MB/s 8 GB DDR4 RAM (2400 MHz CL17) Novabench 24106 MB/s WinSat 26737 MB/s
Doubling the RAM noticeably improved the overall performance of the system. But switching to an SSD is like upgrading from floppy disks to a HDD back in the day. Over ten times faster right off the bat.
The benchmarking provided by the Samsung Magician app is no less dramatic. (IOPS is short for Input/Output Operations Per Second.)500 GB Toshiba DT01ACA HDD (SATA 7200) Write Read Novabench 128 MB/s 133 MB/s WinSat 115 MB/s 500 GB Samsung 980 SSD (PCIe 3.0 NVMe) Write Read Novabench 1467 MB/s 1047 MB/s WinSat 1499 MB/s
From a cold boot to launching Chrome, the current configuration cuts the startup time by 80 percent. Shutting down now takes a few seconds. The time to complete a routine Windows Update decreased an order of magnitude. And that's with a lowly Celeron CPU.500 GB Toshiba DT01ACA HDD (SATA 7200) Write Read Sequential 158 MB/s 158 MB/s Random 216 IOPS 179 IOPS 500 GB Samsung 980 SSD (PCIe 3.0 NVMe) Write Read Sequential 1564 MB/s 1651 MB/s Random 100341 IOPS 147705 IOPS
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Labels: computers, slimline, technology
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