Performance – part 2
Storage performance
Since M.2 NVMe drives are much cheaper recently, then I bet that most users who decide on a new Intel platform will also use one of those fast SSD. Below is one of the more interesting options in the last months – Patriot VPR100 RGB NVMe SSD. We had no PCIe 4.0 SSD to check how high it will go on the PCIe 4.0 chip, but our PCIe 3.0 results are already much better than we were expecting.
Below are PCMark10 results. These results are also great and are even more important because they simulate a real-world workload.
USB performance
USB 3.2 performance has been tested using the Crucial X8 SSD. Presented results are as high as expected for the latest USB controllers and even better than we could see in the Crucial X8 review.
Network performance
The PC Velocita offers us two LAN ports. Since our test environment is limited to 1Gbps, then both LAN ports were tested at the same connection speed. Usually, we see differences between LAN chips, but in this case, both Intel and Realtek were performing nearly identical. Below is a screenshot which is presenting our result, which is a connection speed between two computers. The server is using Intel 219v LAN while our test PC, as I already mentioned, had about the same results on both LAN ports, so there is no point in showing two nearly the same screenshots.
Let’s move to some 3D benchmarks and games.