OpenCL has promised to ameliorate some of these problems by providing a cross-platform, hardware-independent means to accelerate various software functions normally considered the sole province of the CPU. Over time, that promise has turned into reality with a healthy list of applications supporting OpenCL standards, including Adobe's latest CS suite and the ubiquitous WinZip. Now that OpenCL is being used more widely, how do you measure performance and see how these cards stack up in the brave new world of application acceleration? In the time-honored geek tradition, you do it with a flashy benchmark, like Luxmark 2.0 (free).
With low-to-mid range video cards, such as AMD's 5770, enabling mixed acceleration (with both GPU and CPU working) proved useful, although the boost from the CPU often amounted to just 10-20% of the GPU's total score. With a more powerful video card such as the 7950, the CPU turns out to be a boat anchor, crippling GPU OpenGL performance by more than half. Better to let that beast run off the leash by using GPU acceleration only, free from interference from the slower CPU.
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