PC Status | Overall this PC is performing below expectations (25th percentile). This means that out of 100 PCs with exactly the same components, 75 performed better. The overall PC percentile is the average of each of its individual components. Use the charts in the benchmark sections of this report to identify problem areas. |
Processor | With a relatively low single core score, this CPU can handle email, light web browsing and basic audio/video playback, but it will struggle to handle CPU intensive tasks. Finally, with a gaming score of 28.3%, this CPU's suitability for 3D gaming is very poor. |
Boot Drive | The boot partition is located on a mechanical or hybrid drive. Moving the system to an SSD will yield far faster boot times, better system responsiveness and faster application load times. |
Memory | 3GB is enough RAM to run any version of Windows and although it's sufficient for most games, some will benefit from up to 8GB of RAM. 3GB is also enough for modest file and system caches which allow for a responsive system. |
OS Version | Although Windows 7 is still a viable option, it's now 14 years and 9 months old. This system should be upgraded to Windows 10 which is generally faster and has an improved set of core utilities including better versions of explorer and task manager. |
System | HP dc5000 uT(PB468A) (all builds) |
Motherboard | Hewlett-Packard 090Ch |
Memory | 2 GB free of 3.00049 GB @ 0.4 GHz |
OS | Windows 7 |
BIOS Date | 20040212 |
Uptime | 1.1 Days |
Run Date | Aug 09 '20 at 17:18 |
Run Duration | 132 Seconds |
Run User | USA-User |
Background CPU | 8% |
Actual performance vs. expectations. The graphs show user score (x) vs user score frequency (y).
Processor | Bench | Normal | Heavy | Server |
---|---|---|---|---|
Intel Pentium 4 3.20GHz
XU1 PROCESSOR, 1 CPU, 1 cores, 1 threads
Base clock 3.2 GHz
|
28.3%
Poor
|
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Memory Kit | Bench | Multi core | Single core | Latency |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unknown 35GB
null MHz
1024, 512, 1024, 512, 33280 MB
|
11.1%
Very poor
|
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L1/L2/L3 CPU cache and main memory (DIMM) access latencies in nano seconds