On Dec 23, 2010, at 8:14 AM, Marko Käning wrote:

> OK, I have given a lot of data comparing my MacOSX against the virtual Linux 
> - i.e. using the same hardware.

Aha, yes, let's use the same hardware in both cases!

> Now, my 1year old iMac has a 3 GHz Dual Core.

Sure, OK.

> Let's compare this with my 1.5 years old cheap ASUS laptop. It is Dual Core 
> T4200 at 2.2 GHz, i.e. definitely slower than my iMac.

Um, not OK? :)

If you're really serious about figuring out what's going on here, install Linux 
on your 1 year old iMac (not running under a VM, obviously, but in another 
partition) with BootCamp and actually compare performance on identical 
workloads, then compile the code you're benchmarking with profiling enabled 
(this is supported on both MacOSX and Linux) and compare the bottlenecks you 
see.  That would be quite instructive.  Comparing hardware by age or price is 
not, since all hardware has individual strengths and weaknesses (as do the OSes 
which run on it) and simply looking at CPU clock speed or memory bandwidth does 
not tell the whole story by any stretch of the imagination.  That is why you 
have to take all variability out of the equation before comparing X and Y for 
pretty much any value of X and Y or any conclusions you reach won't be worth 
the trouble you took to get there.

- Jordan

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