Windows 11 can usually shine in applications
Let’s first compare Windows 10 and the patched Windows 11 with the L3 bug fixed. Leaving the older Catia aside (and hoping for the next patch), the applications with the exception of AutoCAD (maximum -3.3%) are always slightly or even very clearly in front. Creo can take the cake, because almost 19% is quite a number, just like the over 16% for Caffe, although both applications are not really CPU-heavy applications, but do not slow down the graphics card that much when calculating (Caffe) or rendering (Creo).
If you now look at the progress of the patched version of Windows 11 compared to the unpatched version, only AutoCAD appears with a maximum of -1.6% on the negative side, all other applications profit partly very clearly to extremely. So the patch definitely works better than initially suspected. However, you have to give Microsoft time after such patches to deliver the forgotten parts. There’s not only a method to this, but it’s really extremely annoying.
Gaming without disasters
A whole three games are certainly not very representative, but show a trend in the selection. Except for Metro, there is no deterioration, but in some cases also here up to over 8% increase, if you catch the right game. However, even once Windows 10 is faster, the variances and frame times, when looked at in detail, are almost always better on Windows 11 than on Windows 10. This is also true for other games that I had only tried out due to time constraints. Of course, there will always be negatives that see Windows 10 as having a very strong advantage, but that goes both ways. Windows 11 has now once still the slight flair of banana juice (software I did not want to write), but that will certainly settle in perspective.
The patch helps especially Shadow of the Tom Raider to make up for the slump of the unpatched Windows 11 version and even turn it into a slight advantage! Not bad.
Summary and conclusion
Already after the first patch from the weekend, which took care of the L3 bug and other things, all hopes are now on the patch for the CPPC bug (or against it) announced for 10/21/2021. Then it will be interesting to see if the previous negative outliers can also be recaptured and there might even be a further performance increase compared to Windows 10. Based on that I will make the final decision which operating system I will use for benchmarking the launch of Intel’s Alder Lake.
Even though Intel Germany hasn’t supported me for a long time, I simply owe it to my readers (and my own curiosity) to ignore just that too completely emotionless and write an appealing launch review. And it’s always a personal challenge to not let anyone tell you to shut up, while still being fair and objective about the products that interest my readers. That’s exactly why I’m sitting here, continuing to test and even sticking to deadlines that I really shouldn’t feel bound to.
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