malt ipecac
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2020
I've noticed my CPU scores about 5% higher in CPU benchmarks on Linux than on Windows, but I'm not sure if the results are invalidated by the platform jump.
Edit: In retrospect, I'm not sure what I was asking for. The purpose of a cross-platform benchmark is...to compare performance across platforms in a standardized test. So based on that, I guess the true improvement (on geekbench, at least) is ~5% plus a sense of pride and accomplishment.
The other (potential) improvements of working on my compiled-from-source Linux installation are much harder to measure because those improvements largely manifest over exceedingly short time frames, like the delay between keypress or mouse movement and on-screen feedback.
They're also hard to specifically attribute to compilation, as opposed to some other factor like a kernel tweak or the fact that I'm not using software compositing in Linux. Unfortunately, you can't really test any one variable in isolation (I don't know if it's even possible to turn off compositing in Windows 10).
Anyway, I'm happy with the improvement in perceived performance. The benchmark difference shows empirically it's not just the placebo effect, even if it's partly (or mostly) the placebo effect.
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