AMD and Nvidia have withdrawn from the SySmark application performance benchmark programme, leaving Intel as the only major chip participant.
BAPCo's SYSmark 2018 is an application-based benchmark that uses real-world applications to replay usage patterns of business users in the areas of productivity, creativity, and responsiveness. BAPCo’s membership development team represents the breadth of the computing industry and harnesses a consortium of experts. Ordering Information: APPmark is a complimentary download available from iTunes, Google Play and the Windows Store. Just search for APPmark 2018 on your devices app store.
![Cpu Cpu](http://bapco.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/anand_sysmark.png)
The resignation of AMD from the BapCo group, which administers the SySmark benchmark, was revealed on Tuesday. Its announcement came two weeks after the release of the 2012 version of the benchmark, which measures the performance of applications in a variety of hardware environments.
In its statement, AMD said it believes the benchmark does not accurately reflect the performance of its chips.
'The SySmark benchmark is not only comprised of unrepresentative workloads (workloads that ignore the importance of heterogeneous computing and, frankly, favour our competitor's designs), but it actually generates misleading results,' Nigel Dessau, the company's chief marketing officer, wrote in a blog post.
Both AMD and Nvidia design processors with a heterogeneous architecture, in which large and small cores are distributed across the same die. By contrast, Intel's chips are homogenous and do not mix differently sized cores on the same die.
Nvidia confirmed to ZDNet UK that it has withdrawn from the SySmark benchmark, but declined to explain why.
BapCo is disappointed that a former member of the consortium has chosen once more to violate the confidentiality agreement they signed, in an attempt to dissuade customers from using SySmark.
– BapCoThe BapCo consortium includes chipmaker Intel, along with Dell, HP, Hitachi, Microsoft, Samsung, Toshiba and others. On Tuesday, the group defended its 2012 benchmark, noting that AMD participated in its two-year development.
'AMD voted in support of over 80 percent of the SySmark 2012 development milestones, and were supported by BapCo in 100 percent of the SySmark 2012 proposals they put forward to the consortium,' the group said in a statement.
'BapCo is disappointed that a former member of the consortium has chosen once more to violate the confidentiality agreement they signed, in an attempt to dissuade customers from using SySmark to assess the performance of their systems,' it added.
SySmark benchmark
According to BapCo, the SySmark benchmark is used to measure performance by PC makers, hardware and software developers, IT departments, system integrators, publishers and testing labs. It also argued that the applications used in the 2012 package give a 'real-world' assessment, as they include Microsoft Office, Adobe Acrobat and Autodesk AutoCad.
The AMD-BapCo row over SySmark has been running for at least a decade. In 2002, AMD accused BapCo of removing applications from the benchmark that showed a performance advantage for AMD over Intel.
In 2005, reviewers at ZDNet found that 'Intel's processors perform better under BapCo's SySmark thanks to its greater prevalence of Pentium 4-optimised applications'.
In 2010, AMD criticised the SySmark 2007 benchmark, the last one before the 2012 version. The chip designer said the 2007 package did not easily allow IT decision makers to break down the figures by user roles and argued this would lead to a bias toward Intel architecture chips.
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