LINUX vs WINDOWS: complete performance test!

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2024
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    #linux #windows #benchmark
    00:00 Intro
    00:42 Sponsor: monitor and secure your internet connection
    01:46 The benchmark setup
    03:04 Resource Usage
    06:52 Internet Speeds
    08:32 CPU Benchmark
    09:17 GPU + Gaming Benchmarks
    13:35 Battery Life
    14:34 Conclusions?
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    I'll use a Stellaris 15, with an i7 12700H, 16GB of RAM, 1TB of SSD + an RTX 3060. It has a 1440p screen that I'll run at 60hz.
    In terms of operating systems, I'll run default windows 11 with all of its updates and the nvidia game ready drivers, and the latest Ubuntu 22.10 with the proprietary nvidia drivers, on X11, and no other specific customization to the default.
    Ubuntu uses up 25 gigs. On Windows, the install uses 29 Gigs.
    Ubuntu's System Monitor reports 1.9 gigs of RAM used after a cold boot. On Windows, the system reports 3.3 Gigs of RAM being used, after a fresh boot.
    Although it does report 4.7 Gigs of RAM being cached, which should represent that preemptive memory usage, while Ubuntu reported about 3.9 gigs of cached RAM. If we add used RAM and cached RAM, Ubuntu uses around 5.8 Gigs, where Windows uses 8 Gigs.
    I used Kdiskmark on Ubuntu, which reported read speeds of 3360 MBps, and write speeds of 2706. On Windows, I used Crystal Disk Mark, and got read speeds of 3505 MBps, and write speeds of 2782 MBps.
    I ran a speedtest both in Wifi and plugged in using ethernet.
    Using Wifi, Windows 11 got a download speed of 108 Mbps and an upload speed of 196 Mbps.
    On Ubuntu, the same speedtest over wifi got 154 Mbps for download speed, and 201 for upload.
    Using ethernet, Windows got 512 Mbps down, and 483 Mbps up. Ubuntu, plugged with the same cable, got 508 Mbps down, and only 123 Mbps up.
    On to the CPU benchmarks, namely Geekbench 6. On Windows, it gave me a score of 2216 in single core, and 10805 in multi core.
    On Ubuntu, the same geekbench 6 got scores of 2494 in single core, and 10138 in multi core.
    We're going to run Unigine heaven on both operating systems, at High settings, in fullscreen, at the native 2560x1440p resolution, with tesselation and anti aliasing disabled.
    On Ubuntu, I got 114 FPS average, with a score of 2878, minimum FPS was around 20, and max at around 202.
    On WIndows, running the same benchmark using openGL with the exact same settings, I got 105 FPS average, with a score of 2665, 7.5% lower, and a minimum FPS of 14, and max of 219.
    Running the same benchmark using DirectX 11 on Windows resulted in better performance, with an average of 139FPS, and a score of 3513, but minimum FPS dropping even lower at 10, and much higher max FPS as well, at 283.
    For Shadow of the Tomb raider, running the in game benchmark at high details, at the native resolution, I got 80 FPS on average on Ubuntu. On windows, I got an average of 87 FPS, with more stable frame times.
    Horizon doesn't have an in game benchmark, but playing the same sequence of fighting this thunderjaw, with the game running at the native 1440p resolution, at high settings, with an uncapped framerate, I got a little less than 60 FPS on Ubuntu. It mostly stayed at around 55 FPS for the whole fight.
    On Windows, using the exact same settings, and playing the same fight, I got more around 65 to 70 FPS. Although for some reason the game didn't have any audio, not that I would have heard it over the fan noise that went into overdrive on Windows.
    Now, for battery life, I used Firefox on both operating systems, and played youtube videos in a loop until the battery died, over wifi, at mid brightness, in battery saving mode, with nothing else running in the background and Both devices running in hybrid graphics mode.
    On Ubuntu, the laptop lasted for 6 Hours and 52 minutes before it died, a little bit lower than what I got when using it with Fedora when I reviewed it.
    On Windows, it only endured for 5 hours and 36 minutes.
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Комментарии • 919

  • @TheLinuxEXP
    @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +39

    Download Safing's Portmaster and take control of your network traffic: safing.io

    • @WohaoG
      @WohaoG Год назад +2

      Kind of unfair to test windows 11 even though nobody uses windows 11

    • @DryPaperHammerBro
      @DryPaperHammerBro Год назад +2

      @@WohaoG I use it

    • @N3ZLA
      @N3ZLA Год назад

      Hzd does have an in game benchmark

    • @WohaoG
      @WohaoG Год назад

      @@DryPaperHammerBro You are not a person

    • @WohaoG
      @WohaoG Год назад

      @@DryPaperHammerBro You are an alien hired to corrupt and assassinate all humans

  • @nice_bnuuy
    @nice_bnuuy Год назад +438

    Personally more curious as to how other Linux distributions compare when it comes to performance, wonder if we can get that comparison in the future.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +137

      We might!

    • @miguidieu06
      @miguidieu06 Год назад +23

      It is really time consuming tho, he would need like 2 or 3 of the same computer so it's faster. Maybe making 1 video a week about a different OS would be a great way to do it and as weeks advance, we get more and more comparison. But that would be really interesting, maybe we could debunk those riced up distro to show they're maybe not that good

    • @noble_lime
      @noble_lime Год назад +3

      Linux is linux

    • @rmmichael95
      @rmmichael95 Год назад +5

      It is probably more down to the kernel, like the clear linux kernel might work better with intel.

    • @tosch9057
      @tosch9057 Год назад +5

      While distros would certainly be interesting, I feel like DEs (and WMs) on a distro that implements them well would be more interesting. The only distro I'm specifically curious about would be a highly Optimized gentoo setup compared to some other more commonly used setups. Idk maybe Ubuntu vs fedora gnome vs arch with a light weight WM like i3 or sway vs gentoo (with idk what setup) vs kde neon vs opensuse tumbleweed with kde. That would be so much work, but would certainly answer a lot of my questions.

  • @latetotheparty5156
    @latetotheparty5156 Год назад +283

    I'm pretty shocked that battery life was better on Ubuntu than on Windows. I remember battery life usually being worse on Linux though the last time I've used Linux on laptops is around 5 years ago (I built a rig). I guess the power management has greatly improved throughout the years and as a current Zen 3 user, I hope the EPP driver brings more improvements in Kernel 6.3.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +47

      Yeah, it was surprising to me as well!

    • @akza0729
      @akza0729 Год назад +20

      The battery is better on Most GNOME based distributions and often supports the ability to open with dGPU. I thought Windows gives less battery for me because it spins my Secondary Drive ( HDD ) with that Windows Defender. I can hear the fans crying randomly.

    • @itznukeey
      @itznukeey Год назад +28

      Windows 11 has absolutely terrible battery life on most laptops. I tried Lenovo Yoga i7 for around 1600 USD and the laptop had around 4 hours of battery life while doing relatively light tasks such as programming in VS Code

    • @Scranny
      @Scranny Год назад

      I have a ThinkPad from work with a GPU that I installed Ubuntu 20.04 on and the battery life is atrocious (~2 hours)

    • @bandito241
      @bandito241 Год назад +4

      I think Pop_OS goes even further, by default, since they sell laptops and they setup their OS based on that. I remember I used to get over 4 hours on my HP an050nr laptop and that had a small battery (2400 mAh if I am not mistaken)

  • @XoaGray
    @XoaGray Год назад +318

    I think the real beauty in this is that they were generally so close. The takeaway being that you're going to get generally good performance on either OS. Very cool. :)

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +80

      Yep. It’s kind of insane that an OS where some drivers are developed by individuals is that close, or surpasses windows

    • @raventai
      @raventai Год назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP Some Linux drivers come from the community, but many are professionally produced, especially if you will find that particular chip in a server. most corporations depend on Linux and need to get the most out of their hardware investment

    • @sawwwru
      @sawwwru Год назад +7

      @hello "UsE LiNuX" are you guys not fighting for freedom? Isn't it that you guys believe in others choice? How the tables turn? Nobody is dictating nobody period

    • @balala7567
      @balala7567 Год назад +7

      @@TheLinuxEXP Also, your windows test was on a fresh install. If it was done on a 1 year old windows installation, it would probably be slower. (or if you used a minimal meta-distro like Puppy, it would bully windows even on a fresh install)

    • @MrGamelover23
      @MrGamelover23 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@balala7567did you test that?

  • @notjulesatall
    @notjulesatall Год назад +74

    Phoronix maintainer has already done some amazing work comparing Windows and many Linux distros performance for all kinds of applications. He has a full suite of automated benchmarks based on real use cases, from gaming to HPC applications.

    • @srpenguinbr
      @srpenguinbr Год назад +2

      Sqlite also did some benchmarks, to show that SQLite can be faster than accessing the filesystem

    • @piotrc966
      @piotrc966 Год назад

      Yes, and some times Windows wins :).

  • @caldodge
    @caldodge Год назад +557

    To me, the advantages of Linux outweight any possible performance differences. Linux doesn't decay over time, so I don't have to reinstall it periodically. Migrating to different hardware is generally much easier. I can move the entire OS, while with Windows you typcially have to do a new install, then install the applications on it.

    • @misterjeffa2128
      @misterjeffa2128 Год назад +84

      every os decays over time. linux does too. they might be better than windows but that doesnt mean linux is immune to the issue.

    • @eagleearberry5613
      @eagleearberry5613 Год назад +70

      Windows doesn't degrade over time in current versions. This is an outdated myth. This might have been an issue in Windows XP times. As long as you don't install shady stuff and don't go too experimental on the Windows Registry - you will be fine. The migration point is a definitely a big plus for Linux. Just "dd"ing your OS within few minutes is awesome - this came in handy when I recently swapped in a new SSD into my SteamDeck.

    • @lukashavel7690
      @lukashavel7690 Год назад +39

      When was the last time you had to do a reinstall of windows because of that "decay" of yours?

    • @lokelaufeyson9931
      @lokelaufeyson9931 Год назад +9

      You can migrate windows 8 and above without issues but the decay and age rot (and the lovely weight gain in ram usage when it have been running for a few days 24/7) will be there. It is a good advice to reinstall while you are moving so you can remove the age rot and the decay.. and a few bad google searches or installs O.o
      Windows in general need to be reinstalled after 1 year of use, using the same system longer than that is a bad idea.
      Linux can be used longer than a year but as a bald tech dude with glasses i would recommend that you reinstall once a year anyway. It depends on how important the computer is or what its used for.
      I used to run a server and that system was old, maybe 2 years old but it was easier and better to keep the system as it was compared to reinstall a headless server.. Didnt notice any performance drops or issues and was able to log in and out as i pleased withouth issues or slowdowns..
      There is a few programs that show a update popup but its not required to do it and linux wont update unless its allowed.
      linux have no backdoor installs or other "hey look at this, install this" popups.. I usally notice that my computer have been running for 7-10 days 24/7 when using linux. My record is 6 months+ and i got it with a server i was running, worked great and i was able to log in within seconds and do stuff whenever i needed ;)
      My windows cant be running for more than 5 minutes before i get a install from the backdoor and using it for more than 4 days in a row is a nightmare.. the ram goes up and up.. even if i try and close programs.

    • @lukashavel7690
      @lukashavel7690 Год назад +22

      @@lokelaufeyson9931 I had to reinstall windows last time like twenty years ago. Experience might vary I guess. But the current one is running well 5+ years. And it is just another one in the line of several other notebooks, which also ran well (I mostly had to replace them because of motherboard issues - Windows experience for me has been generally good since like XP service pack 2). Not saying that windows does not have other issues. But stability issues or slow downs I do not notice.

  • @SeanSMST
    @SeanSMST Год назад +39

    I appreciate you essentially dualbooting on the same laptop to get optimal comparison. Other comparisons of os tend to use different hardware and can be at least slightly up in the air how accurate tests were. But here, there's no debating same tasks on the same device with same hardware. The results are solid.

  • @powerdude_dk
    @powerdude_dk Год назад +29

    I'm pleased that you didn't make the tests more complicated than they had to be

  • @MichaelNROH
    @MichaelNROH Год назад +186

    Interesting results.
    What generally surprised me were the read/write speeds, since I didn't expect Windows to pop off like that.
    Also quite interesting that Ubuntu takes up that much space by default nowadays.
    Thanks for the video 😉

    • @matthiasbendewald1803
      @matthiasbendewald1803 Год назад +15

      Well, do a git clone of a large project with many small files on a well tuned windows machine vs some linux box. The read/write test basically tested mostly the hardware, as many of those tests did. This is quite interesting to see, but there are other situations where the os matter much more.
      Executing many programs at once. I think windows will do quite well there.
      Handling many small files. Linux would just dominate here in my experience.
      Applications that use a lot of RAM constantly starting and stopping in the background and how this affects overall performance over a longer period of time. Can't even start to predict performance differences on that one...

    • @lokelaufeyson9931
      @lokelaufeyson9931 Год назад +1

      I use alternative OS like arch, mint or any other os that sounds fun to use.. I dont like the UI in ubuntu. Too much "touch pad, tablet or phone based". I can touch my screen at home until i have to cut my nails but it will only give me a really dirty screen with alot of fingerprints..

    • @elimgarak3597
      @elimgarak3597 Год назад

      Specially considering NTFS is utter garbage

    • @HowToLinux
      @HowToLinux Год назад

      Jup, was also surprised by the SSD performance. Funny how much space Ubuntu uses now :O

    • @lokelaufeyson9931
      @lokelaufeyson9931 Год назад +1

      @@HowToLinux ubuntu have a strange development history,, i think it start and become a bit "too much" now.. being unique is good but being too unique can be a downside aswell..

  • @repinsvizios
    @repinsvizios Год назад +131

    Back when I still dual booted, which was around a year ago, I usually got 80-90% of the gaming performance in Linux, that I would in Windows.
    But something like 5 years ago that number was closer to 50%, and getting the games running to begin with was a hassle.
    Gaming on Linux is such a better experience today.

    • @AndRei-yc3ti
      @AndRei-yc3ti Год назад +2

      And new triple AAA titles Iike Atomic Heart run perfectly out of the box at same performance as windows!!

    • @repinsvizios
      @repinsvizios Год назад

      @@AndRei-yc3ti I played Spider-Man: Miles Morales on my Steam Deck, at around PS4 settings, while pulling well under 50 watts from the wall.
      I even have a few people from my old place of employment who have never used Linux, who have gotten the Steam Deck and had no idea it ran Linux until I told them.

    • @Queldonus
      @Queldonus Год назад

      Your wording implies you are only on Linux. Any advice for someone considering jumping in with both feet and totally abandoning Windows?

    • @repinsvizios
      @repinsvizios Год назад +3

      @@Queldonus Not as such, as I have been using Linux for nearly 20 years and have kind of forgotten the onboarding process 😝.
      The biggest thing though is that distributions (distros) don't really matter all that much, the desktop environment is more important, as that is how you interact with the actual machine.
      I run KDE (desktop environment), which is also what the Steam Deck uses, mostly because it is very easy to customize.
      For distro I run Manjaro, but for most of my time in Linux I used Debian.

    • @Mammel248
      @Mammel248 Год назад

      @@Queldonus Get a beginner friendly distro (Ubuntu or Manjaro for example) and if you can choose your desktop environment, KDE is the smoothest transition when coming from Windows. I personally jumped from Windows to only Linux 2.5 years ago and went with Manjaro + KDE Plasma. Haven't looked back since, but I changed my distro of choice to EndeavourOS.
      Don't be afraid to distro hop a lot in the beginning. Sometimes it takes a while to find one that really clicks for you. I had been trying to go full Linux mode on Ubuntu for a while but Ubuntu never clicked for me. Manjaro really ticked all my boxes, and the Arch User Repository is a big reason for it.
      But the best way to switch is to just do it. Just back up your files on an external drive or something, wipe your disk and install some Linux distro on it. No more dual booting and force yourself to use Linux, and you'll find that every problem you Google has a solution ;)

  • @cromfrein5834
    @cromfrein5834 Год назад +26

    Pretty interesting!
    Would be good to see how the major distro families fare as well.
    In general we as a community need more benchmarking of stuff.

  • @SaxaphoneMan42
    @SaxaphoneMan42 Год назад +37

    One reason the Linux Multi-Core score might have fallen a bit is the newer architecture from Intel using efficiency cores and performance cores. IIRC Intel helped Microsoft with the scheduling on their new processors. I would be willing to bet an AMD processor would have had improved performance - even if a small amount - in both single and multi core performance when going from windows to Linux, probably why the open data from Blender benchmarks have Linux as the dominant OS for AMD processors. Another metric that would be interesting to see would be total system power draw while completing benchmarks.

    • @WaltuhBlackjr
      @WaltuhBlackjr Год назад +4

      One note on your point regarding the amount of blender users using AMD is higher in Linux because a higher amount of blender users use AMD cpus because AMD has focused their design architecture on multi-core for longer than intel, whom until recently has focused mainly on single core performance.

  • @miguelborges7913
    @miguelborges7913 Год назад +12

    I didnt expect at all linux winning in battery life here. Interesting.

  • @unlucky1307
    @unlucky1307 Год назад +25

    I'm actually unsurprised about the battery life and the wifi speed differences. Using less background resources should lead to a longer battery life, and Windows update likes to reserve up to 20% of your bandwidth for itself if you don't go in and customize that setting. I am shocked by the Ethernet upload on Linux though, that's pretty awful and might need looked at.

    • @adwaitagnome
      @adwaitagnome Год назад +1

      my guess is that it's a particular problem with the onboard NIC and you won't really get it on other devices.

    • @unlucky1307
      @unlucky1307 Год назад +6

      @@adwaitagnome That's surprising given that it's a device from a manufacturer focused on Linux compatibility. Hopefully the cause gets ironed out regardless of the cause, since that's a pretty bad look for Tuxedo.

    • @adwaitagnome
      @adwaitagnome Год назад +4

      @@unlucky1307 It would be a bad look, but Tuxedo isn't the OEM for their laptops. I'm pretty certain they use Clevo for their laptops who I'm pretty sure also designs the motherboards and decides what NIC to use.
      Realistically, Tuxedo did as much as they could to make it a good laptop for GNU/Linux. There's a good chance that even other Tuxedo laptops (hell, even different revisions of the same laptop) wouldn't have this particular issue. Nick might have just gotten unlucky here.
      To my knowledge, the only GNU/Linux laptop maker who actually manufactures their machines is Starlabs, so they get even more free range to put in good hardware for GNU/Linux than Tuxedo does.

    • @orrotico1177
      @orrotico1177 Год назад +1

      I have been using my Linux desktop pc with Ethernet for more than 4 years, and no difference in upload speed for Internet. Definitely, there was some kind of problem with the machine or some misconfiguration.

  • @TechWorldDeb
    @TechWorldDeb Год назад +48

    That's an excellent comparison of performance... Great hard work for this time consuming video making ! Linux is getting better and better...

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +11

      Thanks! It took a while to make 😂

    • @innerfinder100
      @innerfinder100 Год назад +1

      Not realy because linux have much better distros than ubuntu, super fast and lightwaight like Arch Linux and this will be a desaster for windows

    • @MrKilljay
      @MrKilljay Год назад

      @@innerfinder100 True, but also remember there are Windows tweaks and lighter Windows ISOs out there that can give you better performance as well. Still, Linux's performance is impressive.

  • @douglasknapp4059
    @douglasknapp4059 Год назад +13

    Nick, I think I see a series coming. Benchmarking multiple Linux distributions in head to head competition. Do it bracket style.

  • @flxk
    @flxk Год назад +9

    Nice hand-on comparison. Just one note:
    Under Linux the cache memory is considered to be *free memory*. While under Windows the cache it is part of the *used memory*.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад +2

      That's not how free displays memory use here. Linux considers RAM being used as cache as being used but will free it up for other use if needed.

    • @h3ftymouse
      @h3ftymouse Год назад

      That's not true, cache on Windows is a part of the standby list which isn't included in the total that task manager shows

  • @whitetiger1287
    @whitetiger1287 Год назад +4

    Very nice video! I would have appreciated a written side by side comparison of the various results put on video to better appreciate the differences, side by side

  • @yurtlew2280
    @yurtlew2280 Год назад +2

    Thanks for another great vid. Have you done any tests for battery life with different DEs by any chance??

  • @michaeloconnell145
    @michaeloconnell145 Год назад +1

    Cool to see thank you!
    As someone who has run Linux on my laptop I've noticed huge battery life improvements with the past few years of kernel updates.
    I wonder if some of your performance differences could be due to thermal throttles?

  • @TechJer
    @TechJer Год назад +12

    Hey Nick, thanks for doing this! As Steve Burke from GamersNexus frequently points out, *cooling equals performance.* The boosting behavior of modern CPUs and GPUs makes them work harder when they're cooler. I wonder how your results might have changed if you had found a way to ensure both setups were using the same fan speed curves.

    • @AleksiJoensuu
      @AleksiJoensuu 7 месяцев назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing. If the temps are at 86, I would be checking whether the GPU is thermal throttling.

  • @CaptainUltimaFTW
    @CaptainUltimaFTW Год назад +8

    I have to wonder if there's maybe a bug in the driver for that Ethernet NIC, interesting find!

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +4

      Yeah, it’s weird, and it has the same result on my desktop using Fedora, which doesn’t have the same Ethernet hardware

  • @prakhars962
    @prakhars962 Год назад

    a question : when you updated windows 11 did it install "killer intelligence center" or similar software? It limits your internet speed. generally sits in the startup apps. I've personally tested this on Dell G15 5520. The internet speed is almost same.

  • @giancarlolugo7048
    @giancarlolugo7048 Год назад

    Thank you for taking the time to do this series of tests.

  • @treyquattro
    @treyquattro Год назад +5

    I was going to say that the multi-threaded performance on Ubuntu may be explained by having a pre-5.18 kernel but 22.10 has a 5.19 kernel. 5.18 is the kernel where "Thread Director" (Intel Hardware Feedback Interface) was integrated. Intel did a lot of work with Microsoft on Windows 11 to prepare it for Alder Lake. They did significantly less work with Linux (except for their own variant of course) and it's still ongoing. A newer kernel _might_ help.
    I don't get the difference in upload speeds over ethernet however. It'd be interesting to just do the test over a local ethernet connection: you could do it with rsync set up as a client and server and a set of large files, for example, although that wouldn't be exactly the same test on Windows *unless* you did it on WSL and WSL isn't significantly affecting performance. But that's not exactly the idea is it? It would give you a ballpark. Ideally, there'd be the same app compiled for Windows and Linux, just using a single socket and TCP connection and maxing it out. There are various settings that can affect TCP connections such as buffer size, packet length, how acknowledgements are being handled, window management (transmission window not graphical window), routing, and so on. The network interface should be fairly self-tuning but you never know. There's no reason (that I can think of off the top of my head) why you should get worse transfer speeds over a wired ethernet connection (not that bad anyway) than you're managing with WiFi.
    At one point I had a throttling problem with my cable internet connection and it turned out to be a setting I'd made on the router for supposedly prioritizing game and streaming media traffic. It did nothing except throttle the throughput to less than 20% of what it should have been. I can't see why anything like that would affect Linux more than Windows however. There may be differences in terms of routing based on IPv4 vs. IPv6... You'd have to do a full forensic analysis. It's pretty antagonizing!

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      Yeah he should have used ClearOS as the Linux distro.

  • @renatomartins5901
    @renatomartins5901 Год назад +5

    Would be incredible if you could test with Wayland

  • @foss_sound
    @foss_sound Год назад

    Have you tried a different user agent while uploading with Linux? Sometimes test-pages seem to throttle bandwidth on their side for random reasons for Linux.

  • @lorenzosalino7878
    @lorenzosalino7878 Год назад

    Which is the distribution that you show at 3:16 ?

  • @octia2817
    @octia2817 Год назад +18

    I'm most surprised by the ethernet results! My experience is completely different - windows was a bit slower, but both were pretty close to my top internet connection - no variance big enough to matter.
    I have tested it on 3 diferent PCs, and on several different networks, in several different cities.
    I'd say the problem lies in your specific setup. Very weird. Maybe you're using an incorrect ethernet driver? Maybe swapping from r8168 to r8169 (or back) would help? Most welcome apps for most linux OSes have an option or that

    • @octia2817
      @octia2817 Год назад

      Regarding the GeekBench results - I know you're talking about defaults, but this is easily solved using a ZEN kernel, which is designed for everyday desktops - another easy fix. It should be the default on many distros, really.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +7

      I had the same issue on 2 different computers with 2 different distros :/

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      @@octia2817 people configuring and building their own custom kernels should be the default.

    • @octia2817
      @octia2817 Год назад

      @@1pcfred It will not, do not fool yourself. The majority isn't, doesn't want to nor needs to be technical. And even though it's not very hard, it's very technical. And most people don't even need it. Slap zen if you're using your pc for anything more than basic tasks and you're good to go. People with slower PCs would just get frustrated, because a process that lasts hours would result in no real benefit
      Compile your own kernel only if you really need it. Don't claim that everyone should do it, there's no need for that, and it just scares people away.
      Also, if I remember correctly, if you remove support for different architectures, hardware upgrades will screw up your install. And who wants to deal with that? Who wants to remember about that? Not most people. And they shouldn't need to.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      @@octia2817 you don't screw anything up. You just chroot if all else fails. You can have as many kernels installed as you like too. You can only run one at a time though. Learn how to drive that PC.

  • @NathOnGames
    @NathOnGames Год назад +4

    You're a brave man making this video, got my pop-corn in the microwave ready for the flame war to go down.

  • @mat_max
    @mat_max Год назад

    did the laptop come with ubuntu preinstalled or did you installed it on it by youtself? because who knows if maybe system76 made some optimizations or put some drivers on the oem installation

  • @cesarubiernatorres8248
    @cesarubiernatorres8248 Год назад

    What file system did u choose ?

  • @guss77
    @guss77 Год назад +4

    Thermals: on windows this often relies on the OEM drivers for specific chassis - which makes sense as different laptops with otherwise identical components will have different thermals. That being said, on my Dell XPS I have the same issue: you can tune it to "super noisy fans all the time" or "run so hot you not only throttle the CPU and GPU but also burn my knees" - and there's nothing in between. On Ubuntu it is much saner and even in "performance mode" you only get occasional boosts of full fan.

  • @BogdanTestsSoftware
    @BogdanTestsSoftware Год назад +4

    Could you also try benchmarking Vulkan somehow?

  • @NFvidoJagg2
    @NFvidoJagg2 Год назад +1

    when doing these types of comparisons. would it be possible to put comparison numbers side by side? bit of a pain having to flip back and forth through the video

  • @carloshkayser
    @carloshkayser 5 дней назад +1

    What Linux distribution was that at 3:12?

  • @nic_s3385
    @nic_s3385 Год назад +3

    A comparison between Linux Distros/desktops would be quite interesting I think.
    I have two 10 year old laptops and battery life was doubled going from Windows to Ubuntu for the one laptop and I got the same result on the other laptop with Mint. So I was surprised to hear that Linux usually does worse. So it really can be very different from device to device I guess. The Mint laptop is actually my mother's machine and since she spends 99% of her time in browser it was a no-brainer to put her on Linux and now I don't have to worry about Windows slowly mutating in size over time. These old machines also respond better with Linux than Windows did, but on modern hardware it's hard to tell a real difference between the 2 in day to day use... at least in my experience ;)

  • @deadeye1982a
    @deadeye1982a Год назад +4

    [8:10] forget the speed tests with a browser over the internet. They are not reliable. Maybe the lower upload speed is a setting of the browser. Perhaps it's a driver issue. The tool iperf3 is a good start for network speed tests. You can run an iperf3 server on your local network. I did the test and got over Ethernet the full upload speed, but my upload is only 50 MBit/s.

    • @MaryamMaqdisi
      @MaryamMaqdisi Год назад +1

      That is fascinating, thanks for sharing

  • @gabriel.gavazzi
    @gabriel.gavazzi Год назад

    Finally! I've been wanting for a big channel to make a new benchmark video comparing these two OSes for a long time now! Thank you!!

  • @LouisFSilva
    @LouisFSilva Год назад

    What is the linux distribution you are using in the 3:14 of the video? I really liked the look. 😄

  • @tmifb9926
    @tmifb9926 Год назад +3

    Vanilla stock software settings is what 99% of users do so correct to do in stock settings

  • @docopoper
    @docopoper Год назад +6

    Nice to know there isn't much difference overall. Linux has way less spyware, trusts me to customise things more, comes with Python installed. And, I think KDE Plasma looks way nicer than Windows 11.

    • @Lampe2020
      @Lampe2020 Год назад +3

      My favourite DEs are Cinnamon (as on Linux Mint 21.1, in dark mode with green accent colour) and Unity (as on Ubuntu Unity 22.04 LTS with theme Yaru-unity-dark, making the accent colour purple).

  • @razzeeee
    @razzeeee Год назад +1

    Wondering how ubuntus choice of ext4 affects the disk test, would be interesting to see fedora with btrfs

  • @ariseyhun2085
    @ariseyhun2085 Год назад

    Awesome video!! Might be good to add the numbers (such as fps) on the screen when comparing the two operating systems so we can just see the difference at a glance

  • @PihkalTheTihkal
    @PihkalTheTihkal Год назад +3

    Great video, Nick!
    Really appreciate this type of content.
    In my opinion the slight performance deficit of Linux does not outweigh all the negatives Windows has in comparison to Linux.
    If you love an open and free (in every aspect of the term) OS, which doesn't spy on its users, Linux is for you.
    I've made the switch almost 3 years ago now and haven't looked back, Linux is amazing!
    Thanks for this excellent video!

  • @aliexmuzkillme
    @aliexmuzkillme Год назад +5

    I really miss using Fedora, but it broke after an update for some reason. I'll probably switch back when I get home. Windows definitely had an edge with gaming on my Intel Iris Plus, but then I don't game very often so it's alright.

    • @zerotactix5739
      @zerotactix5739 Год назад

      Same, anything other than a Ubuntu-based distro keeps causing issues now and then. Arch-based Manjaro simply felt like a beta OS to me, everything ready to crash and burn the moment I do something a little 'different'. Yes I'm a Linux noobie, and it's certainly not ideal for a beginner. Currently using Mint and it's working fine enough. But no Freesync is killing it for gaming. I always have to crawl back to Windows for some reason or the other, so it's still my main.
      Not to mention, Dolby Atmos supported games are insanely good sounding, so that alone is enough for me to never delete Windows.

  • @SkegAudio
    @SkegAudio Год назад

    Hi, Nick! What distro or desktop environment is at 3:11 ? Thank you

    • @SaberRiryi
      @SaberRiryi Год назад +1

      Did you ever figure this out? I was curious too.

    • @SkegAudio
      @SkegAudio Год назад

      @@SaberRiryi never found the answer :(

    • @SaberRiryi
      @SaberRiryi Год назад

      @@SkegAudio I think I may have figured it out actually. I think the file manager says dolphin and I think that's part of KDE. Not sure what distro but hopefully that helps you out

    • @SkegAudio
      @SkegAudio Год назад

      @@SaberRiryi Yeah that's as far I got too lol

  • @turtle11t
    @turtle11t Год назад

    I wasn't able to get Unigine Valley (similar to Heaven) to run on Linux - it showed a black screen upon startup then crashed.

  • @runef3356
    @runef3356 Год назад +6

    Seems like the better gaming performance on windows is (at least partially) due to lower temperatures and thus higher clock speeds - the OSes seem to handle fan management differently. It would make sense to manually set fan speeds to the same level on both OSes for a fair comparison.

    • @Lampe2020
      @Lampe2020 Год назад +3

      Yeah, Windows BLASTED the heating-up components with air while Ubuntu used the fan more conservatively.

    • @akza0729
      @akza0729 Год назад +4

      Power Management is also a part of what makes an OS & Kernel better. So I think it was fair.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      Games perform better on Windows because developers optimize better for Windows. Why would they expend the same amount of effort on a fraction of a percent of their users? Linux gamers isn't even 1% of the market. So you're damned lucky it works at all.

    • @runef3356
      @runef3356 Год назад

      @@1pcfred this is not true. Generally, games running on proton/wine run about as well as on windows, some better and some worse.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      @@runef3356 I don't do Wine. The sulphates give me a hangover. I don't do Windows at all either. It's native binaries or nothing at all.

  • @pritkumar2888
    @pritkumar2888 Год назад +5

    Now this is some quality video from you

  • @fabyo9291
    @fabyo9291 Год назад

    I use Manjaro Os what do you think about it.But it to many wich to choose to hard

  • @gelogia
    @gelogia Год назад

    The Portmaster URL in the AUR package is broken gets 404 not found

  • @amitlavon1647
    @amitlavon1647 Год назад +9

    For me the main takeaway is encouraging - both systems are pretty much on par with each other, so you can use whatever you like without fear of losing too much in terms of performance. I usually prefer Windows for my everyday work but I love watching your videos :)

  • @Beryesa.
    @Beryesa. Год назад +4

    Maybe that fan blast also helps a little on windows
    I'm sure battery life difference was because of Microsoft making sure you're safe from getting worse ads 😏

  • @xSnipah
    @xSnipah 11 месяцев назад

    how to get the same setup as 3:11?

  • @1stcorazon
    @1stcorazon 6 месяцев назад

    Can you please tell me which OS is that at 3:11 ? it looks really cool

  • @NoStLinuxGaming
    @NoStLinuxGaming Год назад +3

    I think a great game to test the performance would be Doom Eternal, as it uses Vulkan both on Linux and on Windows. In case of Shadow of the Tomb Raider Feral Interactive ported it from DirectX to Vulkan, which could result in a worse performance.
    The NVIDIA drivers on Windows also obviously get a lot more attention. I would be very interested in seeing a comparison while using a modern AMD GPU.

    • @kornelobajdin5889
      @kornelobajdin5889 Год назад

      Also rdr 2, there are probably more games with vulkan on windows. Oh and a fun fact, vulkan can run more stable on w10 with vulkan than dx. And that was on my 1050ti gpu a few years back. Vulkan was much smoother than dx for some reason.

  • @akza0729
    @akza0729 Год назад +3

    I don't know the type of testing you will do yet.
    But before I start watching, I'll say for CPU intensive Multi threaded tasks, Linux Wins.
    Graphics intensive tasks, Windows.
    Since Linux is still targeted at Servers.
    Edit: I wasn't far off..

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +3

      I was surprised… Windows seems slightly better at CPU multi threading

    • @akza0729
      @akza0729 Год назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP Same. Last time I heard that Windows had a hard time dealing with more than 16 threads. Maybe the difference wouldn't be there if the core count scales.
      But then that would be a server / workstation comparison.

  • @Queldonus
    @Queldonus Год назад +1

    Thank you for doing these tests on default installs. That’s a valuable point of reference for someone like me that’s looking to move my gaming system to Linux.
    It’s just a matter of if I do it now, or in a couple of years at the end of Win10 support

  • @kenneth_jensen
    @kenneth_jensen Год назад

    Awesome comparison 👍🙂
    It could be awesome to see the comparison with KDE and PopOS vs Windows 🙂
    Which disto are you using with KDE? 🙂

  • @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540
    @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540 Год назад +2

    I have two similar systems, fairly high performance.
    Windows at work and Manjaro at home.
    With similar startup apps on both machines i can get 3.5GB used on Manjaro and 6.5GB used on Windows 11, after logging in.
    Manjaro can also boot up in about 4 seconds, whereas Windows 11 takes about 15.

    • @ransacked
      @ransacked Год назад +1

      That's your problem you're using manjaro. Manjaro is super bloated.

    • @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540
      @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540 Год назад

      ​@Ransacked did you even read the comment??
      Troll

    • @ransacked
      @ransacked Год назад

      @@keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540 lol here comes the manjaro fanboys. I'm not trolling it's the truth. Manjaro is the ubuntu of arch based distros. Bloated.

    • @zerokun2655
      @zerokun2655 Год назад +2

      @@ransacked yes but you said "that's the problem", except there is no problem, Manjaro beat windows in everything.
      I also think Manjaro is bloated and not a great distro but there is no reason to mention it now, not like this
      If anything you should say "if Manjaro can do this imagine something better like Arch"

    • @ransacked
      @ransacked Год назад

      @ZeroKun265 lol ok that's still his problem and your comment doesn't change my mind.

  • @Nekosly
    @Nekosly Год назад +6

    no you all no first

  • @DanielGonzalez-ck7qv
    @DanielGonzalez-ck7qv Год назад

    Anyone know what's the distro in the 3:15? Thanks

  • @AlokSingh-rj1gt
    @AlokSingh-rj1gt Год назад

    03:10, what distro is that??

  • @ismailbsrn
    @ismailbsrn 2 месяца назад

    guys what is this distro at 3:11 it looks like macos so much. if you know what is this distro or something else (like desktop customizer idk) pls comment below i need it so bad. thanks.

  • @Crackalacking_Z
    @Crackalacking_Z Год назад

    Was powertop autotune and tpl installed on Ubuntu? That combo make a difference on my laptop, like 10-15% when on BAT

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад

      I didn’t install them!

    • @Crackalacking_Z
      @Crackalacking_Z Год назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP I see, especially for notebook users who work off battery, it's really a must, gotta protect each precious %, for prolonged video playback, VA-API and VDPAU are great, mpv, KODI, even Firefox is able to decode on the GPU nowadays, many codecs are supported, including the expensive h265

  • @moetocafe
    @moetocafe 10 месяцев назад

    Very good video, thanks for it! And very interesting and kind of unexpected results on some tests :)

  • @jtland4842
    @jtland4842 3 месяца назад

    I would love to know what clock speeds the computer ran at during both Linux and Windows testing. Nvidia GPUs, like most modern processors, adjust their clock speeds quite a bit depending on the temperature they are running at. The 6 degree difference pretty much completely invalidates the performance comparisons. Can you please retest while manually controlling the fan speeds so that the computer maintains the same temperatures on both systems?

  • @theodoros_1234
    @theodoros_1234 Год назад

    Great video, the results are fairly interesting! I would say that many of these tests would vary greatly from one computer to another, due to driver optimizations for each component on each OS. For example, on my previous laptop, I got Geekbench results that were within margin of error between Linux and Windows, but battery life was way worse on Linux. Also, Windows 10 used up only around 2-3GB, whereas both 10 and 11 use 4GB on every new computer I checked, including my new laptop, and like you noticed on yours. In addition, my friend's old laptop with an older Nvidia discrete GPU has very wacky drivers on Linux, whereas newer Nvidia GPUs that I've tested work way smoother.

  • @cyka_delik9537
    @cyka_delik9537 11 месяцев назад

    Can we get the same test with Arch Linux?

  • @joanneortiz3251
    @joanneortiz3251 Год назад

    Very interesting. I didn't expect the differences in write and network performance.

  • @craigharris9591
    @craigharris9591 Год назад

    Awesome Video, could you please add a comparison graph for next time though. I had to keep rewinding the video back to compare scores. Would love to see performance compared using something like Handbrake between these two OS's. Thanks for posting!!

  • @spiderrodrigo1983
    @spiderrodrigo1983 Год назад

    Linux is limited in HDMI 2.1 to 2.0 so I can't use 4k 120 hertz is this true?, question is there a way around this?

  • @the-patient-987
    @the-patient-987 Год назад +1

    I think this a good start and a very interesting concept. I've been waiting for some reviewers to test performance between Linux and Windows. That said I guess the result are inconclusive partially because it's being tested with crippled hardware to begin with. I'd be much more interested in the results testing with a more powerful desktop computer, with room to stretch its legs. As a side note, including some comparative graphs would make the numbers a lot easier to read and digest.

  • @alfredovasquez774
    @alfredovasquez774 Год назад

    I didn't know keeps old files in the background. I always wondered why after using a computer for the longest time that no matter what I deleted, I could never go back to the same space as I started on initial install

  • @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540

    Curious -- what kernel version was Ubuntu running?

    • @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540
      @keepanopenmindlookatallthe2540 Год назад +1

      Only reason I ask is because with version 6, the kernel uses Rust which is supposed to be a faster language (not to mention limiting the BOF risk).

  • @vrks1353
    @vrks1353 Год назад

    Which laptop is that?

  • @aras1762
    @aras1762 Год назад

    We want part 2 in comparison with professional apps like compiling a code or performance during video editing etc.

  • @user-de3ud9gc7z
    @user-de3ud9gc7z Год назад

    I saw that there was a new version of unigine benchmark with vulkan support,
    maybe results on linux using vulkan would be comparable with directX?

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад

      Ah cool, I’ll use that next time!

  • @egyeneskifli7808
    @egyeneskifli7808 Год назад +2

    For the graphics tests: there is clearly driver related differences. The difference in fan curves is the best proof to this. Most of (practically all) these days CPUs and GPUs are thermally limited and controlled. If your silicon is cooler, the clock speeds will be higher, ending in higher performance. That 7 °C higher temperature on its own can resulted the lower gaming performance under linux, because your GPU ran at lower clock speeds.

  • @recipeforhat
    @recipeforhat Год назад

    HZD does have a benchmark in the settings, look at the bottom for the keybind to press to start it.

  • @thekillersclan420
    @thekillersclan420 Год назад +2

    My OS uses 820MiB of RAM when fully loaded. 😅 I‘m using Hyprland (it‘s a quite heavy Compositor) and I have an authentication agent and some other small tools running. Although these 820MiB include about 30 MiB by Terminator and about 10 MiB by Bashtop.

  • @Gigachad-oq8rs
    @Gigachad-oq8rs 8 месяцев назад

    I would love to see a "trimmed" test as well where you do your general first install optimizations for both windows and linux and add those to the comparison as well, just to see what the peak of what the average user can get on both windows and linux

  • @BrodieFairhall
    @BrodieFairhall Год назад

    I'm interested to see what the difference in boot times is?

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      What is this boot that you speak of?

  • @KS-ep9rx
    @KS-ep9rx Год назад

    Can u make this benchmark with zen or xanmod kernels

  • @igorgiuseppe1862
    @igorgiuseppe1862 Год назад

    11:23 i wonder if the performance difference came from the fans... can you increase their speeds on ubuntu to see if improve the performance significally?

  • @funkemunky
    @funkemunky Год назад

    The difference in battery life may have had to do with what codec was used on each video. Sometimes RUclips will default to a codec that doesn’t support hardware decode

  • @pedroalbuquerquebs
    @pedroalbuquerquebs Год назад +1

    I have actually been using WSL2 recently rather than Dual Booting after I had to format my PC after it into RMA. To be fair, the current Linux experience with my hardware is still subpar. From what I've tested the Linux 6.1 kernel has improved a few things (I did a Fedora 37 test install just for fun) and I will probably install Ubuntu 23.04 once it comes out.
    One of the reasons I still prefer Ubuntu over Fedora is that is has fractional scaling on X11 and with NVIDIA hybrid graphics X11 still seems to work better. I also like that it comes with a Dock by default, whereas with Fedora I always risk that Dash do Dock still does not support the latest GNOME version (e.g., right now it seems that it is not compatible with the latest GNOME beta).

  • @MF2_ETaube
    @MF2_ETaube Год назад +2

    Interesting result on speed test, though I get 997.89 down and 999.75 up. It varied by just a few megabits but this was the best result for me at least. On the geekbench I remember I got 5-6% faster on single core on Manjaro while multicore was just about a few points higher than in windows 11 very debloated.

  • @breakfast7595
    @breakfast7595 11 месяцев назад

    I took the plunge into PopOS as my gaming PC OS... It was a bit of a struggle at first, but the improvement in the OS and Steam has been exponential in comparison to previous years. Issues like the cursor not locking on to the primary monitor(out of 3), or Halo MCC settings crashing the game, are gone.

  • @ShamylZakariya
    @ShamylZakariya Год назад

    You mentioned Fedora in the network speed tests - out of curiosity, does Fedora support the machine's nvidia hardware? I'm less concerned about performance than just, "does it work?"

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад +1

      Yeah, it just works, install the drivers and you’re good to go!

    • @ShamylZakariya
      @ShamylZakariya Год назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP Nice!

  • @mattkeith530
    @mattkeith530 Год назад +1

    Thanks! Particularly for the egpu wayland script

  • @RAN-os5gz
    @RAN-os5gz Год назад +1

    What the hell, the D/U speeds. I just did a test on my system (running Tumbleweed) and got 800 down/900 up
    and man...the Horizon test makes me realize how amazing Proton is, damn.

  • @nimr0d85
    @nimr0d85 Год назад

    Thanks for putting so much effort into this!

  • @vitchuu
    @vitchuu Год назад

    Not the point of the video but how'd you get the tiling at 1:55? I assume it's a gnome extension or something?

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Год назад

      It’s on PopOS, by default

    • @vitchuu
      @vitchuu Год назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP Thanks, I'll look up what PopOS uses for it

  • @SirRFI
    @SirRFI Год назад

    Now that you compare one OS to another, maybe compare Fedora to Nobara (GloriousEggroll's Fedora fork customized for gaming)? Would be interesting how significant is custom patched kernel and other improvements that come with it, aside from convenience.

  • @mert4574
    @mert4574 8 месяцев назад

    I think the reason of huge upload speed difference was firewall settings on ubuntu, if it was selected as low then could be roughly same

  • @logicalfundy
    @logicalfundy Год назад

    I wonder what would happen to the gaming tests if you were to force the fan to stay at 100% on Ubuntu?

  • @SeesSean
    @SeesSean Год назад

    Thank You for this research, just started using windows 11 and i can see they made Streaming Privacy a concern with some of the changes they made with file seaching and folder viewing

  • @DonBureq
    @DonBureq Год назад

    hi. thanks for the video. I have a one question about windows vs linux. I heard that Linux is worse when it comes to managing ram and its less stable when it runs out of ram unlike Windows. is it true?