...benchmarks ============= Few days ago Logout [1] send me links to the relevant versions of the GeekBench 2 for some of my machines. I tested only my iMac G5 (it's 1.8 MHz version of the earliest model) and it has score 1051. My Intel Compute Stick has about 2309 [2] (the Windows version but I can assume that Ubuntu version will not be better as it has lower specs). Well, and for a real-life (sort of - it's my testing example) finite element method computation I can get these numbers: iMac G5 (1800 MHz CPU): 39 s Compute Stick (1333 MHz CPU): 51 s SGI O2 (250 MHz CPU): 320 s That's a bit surprising: the O2 is a low-end workstation from 1998 which has well-known limitation of floating point computations performance (a SGI Octane with the same CPU is 2x faster) so it's results are fair. But the iMac is a home computer from 2004 which was not designed for maximum CPU power. The Compute Stick has similar purpose (a home computer) but it's from 2015. I have expected that there has to be more visible progress in CPU speed... ------- But when I searched for a better SmallBASIC version for my Sony Clie then I have found an yCPUbench [2] program for the PalmOS. The author declares compatibility for OS version 3.0 - 6.0 (anyone ever seen Palm OS 6.0 in the wild?) and it works. For now I only have tested 3 machines that were already available and only for the first test from the suite (sieve8192). The results is in bogo_68k_MHz (I have no clue what it is but I assume that in is relative speed to the basic m68k processor at 1 MHz): Palm IIIx: 15 IBM Workpad (should be just re-badged IIIx): 14 Sony Clie PED-UX50/U (m68k emulation mode): 29 Sony Clie PED-UX50/U (native ARM mode): 993 The Palm IIIx has 16 MHz DragonBall CPU (it's a low-power Motorola CPU from m68000 serie). The same should be in the Workpad. It is interesting that the IBM one consistently gives worse results. The Sony is an ARM-based computer with a 123 MHz CPU (designed by the Sony itself). It is about 4 years younger than the 1999 Palm machines of the III serie. Of course it can be interesting to thy more tests and to use more machines (at the moment I have rather complete Palm III line available: a basic III, a IIIx, a IIIe, a IIIxe, a TrgPro and the Handera PDA and possibly other Palm-compatible machines, too). References: [1] gopher://i-logout.cz [2] http://www.nicholson.com/rhn/palm/