Maximize the Windows Performance Rating
Ever since the introduction of the Glass interface in Windows Vista (covered in the previous section), Microsoft has started to take display performance seriously in a non-gaming context.
Enter the Windows Experience Index, a numeric score that supposedly indicates the baseline performance level of your PC's hardware. To view your PC's current score, open the Performance Information and Tools page in Control Panel.
If you seriously want to benchmark your PC, disregard the Windows Experience Index and instead use a tool like PC Wizard (free, http://www.cpuid.com/), HD Tach (free, http://www.simplisoftware.com/), or HD Tune (free, http://www.hdtune.com/). Among other things, real benchmarking software can compare the speeds of two hard disks, provide accurate results on overclocking, and even help with memory timing.
Here, you'll see the five performance indexes that Windows calculates:
Processor
This measures your CPU's number-crunching prowess; specifically, how quickly it can compress and decompress data, encrypt and decrypt data, compute a hash, and encode a video stream. For perspective, here are benchmarks from a handful of Processor scores culled from the Web.
Processor | Processor subscore | Processor | Processor subscore |
Dual Intel Xeon 5160 @3.0Ghz | 5.9 | AMD Athlon 64 x2 4200+ @2.2Ghz | 4.9 |
Intel Core2 Duo 6600 @2.40GHz | 5.4 | AMD Athlon 64 x2 3800+ @2GHz | 4.8 |
Intel Core2 Duo 6400 @2.13GHz | 5.4 | Intel T2500 Core Duo @2GHz | 4.8 |
Intel Core2 Duo T7600 @2.33GHz | 5.2 | AMD Turion 64 x2 Mobile @1.6Ghz | 4.7 |
AMD Athlon 64 x2 5200+ @2.6Ghz | 5.1 | Intel Pentium 4 @ 2.80GHz | 4.7 |
The Windows Experience Index is a performance score based on the weakest performer in your PC
If you're running on battery power, your Processor score may be lower than it would if it were plugged in to AC power. You can change how Windows uses your processor on battery power through the Power Options page in Control Panel.
Memory (RAM)
This measures partly how fast your memory is, but also how much of it your PC has (not including any shared as video memory). Windows actually limits the maximum memory benchmark you can attain, regardless of how fast your RAM is.
Amount of RAM | Max. subscore | Amount of RAM | Max. subscore |
Less than 256 MB | 1.0 | 513-704 MB | 3.5 |
257-500 MB | 2.0 | 705-960 MB | 3.9 |
501-512 MB | 2.9 | 961 MB-1.5 GB | 4.5 |
Beyond 1.5 GB, the score is purely speed-based. Want a higher Memory score? Add more RAM. (It'll have the meager side effect of making your PC faster, too.)
Graphics
This value is the one most closely tied to your PC's ability to render the Glass interface, and also indicates your PC's ability to play back video. The score is based on the video bandwidth (the speed at which your video card can move data) as well as the amount of video memory you have.
A video card that doesn't support DirectX 9 automatically earns a score no higher than 1.0. One for which you don't have a Windows 7/Vista Display Driver Model (WDDM) driver can't receive a score higher than 1.9. To use the Glass interface, you must have a Graphics score of at least 2.0. Glass should run beautifully on a system ranked at 5.0 or higher. An updated driver will usually raise your Graphics score.
Gaming graphics
This measures your video card's 3D prowess, specifically the frames per second it can attain in certain situations.
Like the preceding Graphics benchmark, there are minimum requirements for certain scores. If your video card doesn't support Direct3D v9, it earns a score no higher than 1.0. If support for Pixel Shader 3.0 is absent, then you won't see a score higher than 4.9, regardless of other factors. If you believe your card is capable of these things, yet your score seems unfairly low, your pesky driver is once again likely to blame.
Primary hard disk
This measures the transfer rate, the speed at which your PC can read and write information to the drive on which Windows is installed.
Off to the right, you'll see a Base score emblazoned on a Windows logo. This score isn't an average of the subscores to the left, but rather an indication of the lowest score-the weakest link in the chain, so to speak.
Don't panic if your Processor score is a hair lower than your neighbor's down the street, even though you have a faster CPU. (Because your neighbor is probably worried about your slightly better Graphics score, even though her video card cost $40 more than yours.)
Rather, use these scores only to provide quantitative feedback for the upgrades or tweaks you're doing. And keep in mind that these scores, although based on calculations, aren't quite as rigid as they seem. For instance, refresh the index right after booting Windows, and you may see a 0.1 variance from a PC that has been scored after being active all day. Install a new graphics driver, and your Graphics subscore may go up a few tenths while Gaming graphics dives slightly.
Click the View and print details link to shed some more light on exactly how 7 is calculating your PC's score. You can print the results here or, better yet, highlight everything (Ctrl-A), copy the text to the clipboard (Ctrl-C), and then paste into Notepad (Ctrl-V) to save the results to a file.
Update my score
Click the Re-run the assessment link at the bottom of the page to rescan your system and perform the benchmarks again. But don't be surprised when you don't see any progress bar or other indication that Windows is testing your system; other than periodic sluggishness in the mouse, occasional screen flashes, or increased hard disk activity, you shouldn't notice much of anything happening.
But don't let that fool you: to maximize your scores, make sure you close any running applications (including background tasks like antivirus programs and anything that uses your network), let go of your mouse, and then go get a cup of tea so you avoid doing anything that may interfere with the scoring. It's not unusual for scoring to take 10-30 minutes, even on a fast PC.
If the reassessment fails, you might be low on free disk space; see "If in Doubt, Throw It Out" later in this tutorial, for some tips. If you see this error or something similar:
Cannot complete the requested operation.
An unknown error has caused WinSAT to fail in an unexpected way.
it either means you clicked the Re-run the assessment link while Windows was already reexamining your system, or there's a problem with your video driver that's causing the benchmark system to crash. Update your driver, restart Windows, and try again.
In this tutorial:
- Windows 7 Performance
- Trim the Fat
- Tame Mindless Animation and Display Effects
- Make Menus More Mindful
- Start Windows in Less Time
- Eliminate unnecessary auto-start programs
- Clean out your Temp folder
- Start Windows Instantly (Almost)
- Put your PC to sleep
- Sleep and Hibernate troubleshooting
- Shut Down Windows Quickly
- Start Applications Faster
- Make Your Hardware Perform
- Windows 7 Get Glass
- Maximize the Windows Performance Rating
- Improve Battery Life
- Manage IRQ Priority
- Overclock Your Processor
- Hard Disk
- A Defragmentation Crash Course
- Enable automatic boot defragments
- If in Doubt, Throw It Out
- Optimize Virtual Memory and Cache Settings
- Part 1: Virtual memory settings
- Part 2: Defragment the paging file
- Part 3: Clear the paging file on shutdown
- Part 4: Advanced settings for the adventurous
- Choose the Right Filesystem
- Convert your drives to NTFS
- Advanced NTFS Settings
- Transfer Windows to Another Hard Disk
- What to look for in a new hard disk
- Work with Partitions
- The Disk Management nickel tour
- Create and delete partitions
- Resize and move partitions
- Alternatives to Disk Management
- Different ways to mount a volume