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Processor Performance Rating (P-Rating)
Processor Performance Rating (PR or P-Rating), often mistaken for "Pentium Rating", was a rating system that allowed various x86 manufacturers to gauge the performance level of their microprocessors against equivalent Pentium-level performance. PR specifications were finalized on January 25 and were introduced on February 5, 1996 in a collaborated effort by AMD, IBM, SGS-Thomson, and Cyrix to provide a way to report processor performance.
With the introduction of K6 in 1997, AMD extended this rating system by introducing PR2, comparing models against Intel's Pentium II models.
Measuring P-Rating
Performance rating was obtained by:
- Obtain a representative target system that supports both the Pentium and Cyrix/IBM/AMD processor (e.g. Am5x86 / K5).
- Run Winstone 96 using the Pentium Processor and record the scores for the various frequencies.
- Defragment the hard disk after each test run
- Replace the Pentium processor with target processor (e.g. Am5x86).
- Run Winstone 96 using the target processor and record the score for this processor.
- Compare the Winstone 96 score you get against the Pentium processors. The target processor's P-Rating is based on the highest freqeucny of the Pentium processor that the target processor's Winstone score surpasses.
Documents
- /IBM Microelectronics: Four companies announce new, simplified method for consumers to measure microprocessor performance in PCs
- /Processor Performance Rating (P-rating) Specification
- AMD-K5 Processor Performance Brief; Publication #20084 Revision B/0; June, 1996.
Software
- Ziff-Davis PC Benchmarks CD-ROM (PC Magazine Labs); Ziff-Davis Publishing Group PC Benchmarks CD-ROM, including Winstone 96 and Winbench 96 benchmarks. From PC Magazine Labs, including CPUmark32 and full-motion video tests. October, 1995.