TheOverclocker Issue 29 | Page 14

though as the system is still running at what we would consider a high temperature. There will be no damage to the system caused by this heat and we experienced no instabilities, but the noise level was still bothersome somewhat. If the BIOS had a multiplier option available we would have probably dropped the CPU clock down to 2.6 or even2.4GHz. Another option sorely missed is the iGPU clock multiplier which we would have used to lock the GPU clock at 1300MHz or even higher given that we had significantly reduced the CPU speed. Yes PCMark8 would report a lower score and so would virtually all synthetic benchmarks, but the game performance of the Brix Pro can be increased as we found by using XTU, especially when you factor overclocking into it. With just the two options we could further reduce the noise generated while maintaining the graphics power which is one of the best aspects about the 4770R and hence the Brix Pro. With these two options we would have at our disposal the ability to preserve graphics performance while reducing the noise produced by the system. Not all is lost however, because all of this is can be implemented in software in quite a number of ways. At the time of writing there was a performance and quiet mode introduced in the latest BIOS which is somewhat addressing some of these issues. It is very likely that future updates will further add options which may completely alleviate all concerns of this nature entirely. THE 5200 SURPRISE Unexpected from the BRIX PRO was just how efficient it is at graphics processing. We are mainly talking gaming here, where in a very real sense, INTEL’s Iris Pro 5200 is faster than what AMD can offer on their fastest integrated solution. The assumption is that with such a heavy silicon investment AMD made with Kaveri, it would be far ahead of anything INTEL would be able to produce at present. Yes, the HD 4000 series as present in desktop Haswell CPUs was a marked improvement in performance, but to dramatically improve upon that in one or within the same generation is nothing short of remarkable. Intel’s Iris Pro 5200 and thus by extension the BRIX PRO offers better gaming performance than any system built around any APU can. This is not to be glossed over because it is a milestone for INTEL, which has traditionally been synonymous with the worst graphics processors on the PC landscape. How much faster the 5200 is over AMD’s solution varies and in some tests it’s slower by a very small fraction. However for the most part the 5200 is faster and as a result game capable which is largely the reason why the BRIX PRO is a valid candidate for a Steam Box. In fact, it was one of the machines revealed at CES by none other than Gabe Newell himself as a possible or plausible concept of the Steam Box. The Brix Pro actually plays games. It may not allow you to play every title at 1080P, in fact most games will be limited to 720P but the point is they are playable at fairly decent graphics settings, something that was previously unheard of on any INTEL graphics processor. There are many contexts which make the BRIX PRO appealing, but we here are largely concerned about its performance and it delivers where it counts. In a very odd way it vindicates what AMD had been saying all along about graphics 3DMark Cloud Gate 3DMark Firestrike Catzilla 1.3 720p Resident Evil 6 720p PCMark8 Creativity Suite CineBen GIGABYTE Brix Pro (Turbo Mode) 11253 Graphics: 13693 1482 Graphics: 1557 3624 Hardware: 3531 4023 4195 706 GIGABYTE Brix Pro (Performance mode) 10466 Graphics: 12750 1335 Graphics: 1421 3288 Hardware: 3211 3521 3993 647 4115 4053 364 4053 3770 319 AMD A10 7850K @ 4.4GHz 7972 1621 2766 960MHz GPU / 2400MHz Memory Graphics: 12081 Graphics: 1805 Hardware: 2743 AMD A10 7850K 7035 Graphics: 10814 1575 Graphics: 1714 2581 Hardware: 2559 720MHz GPU/ 2400MHz Memory 14 The OverClocker Issue 29 | 2014