Although I read a lot of benchmarks, and compared benchmarks between processors, I never compared them between desktop against laptops, because I was sure that desktops will win. Wrong.
My most powerful desktop is an AMD3+ socket FX8320, the second fastest in the family of 8 core processors built by AMD. The highest is FX8350. The absolute fastest is the power hungry FX9XXX but it is very expensive and consume too much power and is too hot.
Compare it to my second hand laptop, the Zbook 15, with i7-4800. The fastest is i7-4930 which this workstation is capable of. My Zbook is equipped with 32Gb of DDR3 1600 MHz RAM. My desktop was also equipped with 32Gb DDR3 RAM, at 1860 Mhz.
Look at the userbenchmark readings:
AMD FX-8320-RM 363
Socket 942, 1 CPU, 4 cores, 8 threads
Base clock 3.5 GHz, turbo 3.65 GHz (avg)
Performing as expected (51st percentile)
|
50.2%
Above average
|
59% 73.4 Pts
|
54% 237 Pts
|
62% 414 Pts
|
Intel Core i7-4800MQ-RM 2,075
U3E1, 1 CPU, 4 cores, 8 threads
Base clock 2.7 GHz, turbo 3.3 GHz (avg)
Performing as expected (54th percentile)
|
67.3%
Good
|
84% 106 Pts
|
70% 306 Pts
|
68% 456 Pts
|
Therefore the laptop is faster.
If I were to upgrade them to the highest: fx9590 vs i7-4910mx
|
https://dev1.notebook-check.com/index.php?id=2436:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Worse, desktop PCs CPUs consume more power, and higher frequency, and yet have much lower benchmark readings. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

