
The program immediately gives the user a choice to run the Standard benchmark suite or to select More Tests, where the Express, Extended, and Custom options can be selected. Upon opening the benchmark for the first time, the iconic PCMark logo appears in front of a ship sailing off somewhere in a harbor in Taiwan. Moreover, from PCMark 8 Home to PCMark 10 Extended, the total benchmark runtime has been reduced from 30 to 34 minutes down to 30 minutes. From the PCMark 8 Work suite to PCMark 10 Express, the total benchmark runtime has been reduced from 30 to 34 minutes to just 18 minutes. With revised workloads, Futuremark has been able to cut down the total benchmark time from PCMark 8 Creative to PCMark 10 from 56 minutes to 26 minutes. The Express mode is designed as a shorter test focused on only basic work tasks, or what Futuremark defines as “general office use.” Finally, the Extended mode is a longer benchmark that provides the most thorough assessment of system performance beyond typical office workloads and routines. The standard PCMark 10 mode is designed for the modern office, giving business and enterprise users a way to evaluate PCs for the workplace with specific performance needs in mind. The latest iteration of PCMark now includes three benchmarking modes – Standard, Express, and Extended.

Three modes – Standard, Express, and Extended The combined test brings in an additional workload that puts more load on the CPU and GPU.
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The third new workload is an update to the previous “Mainstream Gaming” workload, now called “Gaming,” that uses a version of 3DMark Fire Strike to more closely resemble a modern gaming scenario.
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A second test called “Rendering and Visualization” uses OpenGL to simulate professional graphics and give an estimate on overall processor scaling performance. One of the new workloads is called “App Start-Up,” which measures the time taken to open various applications and is relevant for assessing storage performance. The release also cuts down the time needed to run a complete benchmark by half when compared to PCMark 8, and removes the need to choose between “Conventional” or “Accelerated” mode to enable OpenCL support.

This year’s PCMark 10 has been designed with focus on improving performance in Windows 10.
