Friday 10 February 2017

Updating our benchmark suite for 2017 and beyond

If you've looked at some of our reviews in the last couple of days, you may have noticed a few different benchmarks and some new charts that we weren't using before. We don't usually do this, but behind the scenes we've just given our benchmark suite a comprehensive update for the first time since 2013. In the interest of keeping you all informed and letting you know what we're thinking here on the Ars Orbiting HQ, this is a good opportunity to run through the tests we do, why we do them, and why we care about benchmarks in the first place.

Charts

First, you'll notice that we're using some new colors in our charts. As much as we liked the bright colors in our previous charts—colors chosen to match the Ars color palette, incidentally—we got semi-regular feedback from colorblind folks that they were hard to read. Ars Creative Director Aurich Lawson chose our new chart colors to be easily legible by people with all common forms of color blindness.

What we're using: CPU and GPU compute benchmarks

We may use benchmarks other than these when we're doing in-depth component reviews of the latest flagship processors or graphics cards, but generally speaking in phone and laptop reviews these are the standard benchmarks we'll be running on everything.

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