Benchmark Program That Tests System Responsiveness

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I have just done a fresh install of win7 on my recently aquired 5 year old Lenovo Thinkpad. I want to test the responsiveness of my system, a bit like the Discomark app for Android. I want to monitor my o/s and try to get an idea when things eventually start to slow down, as we know it can/will happen over time.

I also have a Dell laptop (i7, 8gb ram) with which i installed win 7 x64 onto a few months ago, within a couple of months it was very very slow, i have been using win7 for years and i always do regular maintenance. I have no idea what caused this installation to turn into a slow responding machine, start up times increased too, it was like using an old slow laptop.

So for this reason i want to measure how responsive my system is, then if it ever starts to get slower i can take action or restore from a image backup.

Is there such a program or is there an alternative method that works well?
 
was going to say the dpc latency checker, which I usually use to debug sound glitches and identify mis-behaving drivers, it gives you a ms response time,
which would have some correlation to UI responsiveness.
The system log gives some boot time tracking too, so you can look for degradation or inadvertant bloatware and services.
 

Im by no means an expert but does pc mark not just test your pc hardware and how it performs?


was going to say the dpc latency checker, which I usually use to debug sound glitches and identify mis-behaving drivers, it gives you a ms response time,
which would have some correlation to UI responsiveness.
The system log gives some boot time tracking too, so you can look for degradation or inadvertent bloatware and services.

I have the latency checker installed. What its it actually checking and where do i find the system log? \its running between 150 and 500.
 
I have the latency checker installed. What its it actually checking and where do i find the system log? \its running between 150 and 500.
look on google too - but they enable you to see how responsive the system is to hardware interrupts, there are a number of free tools giving related information,
but if you archive a records of results you can later see if there is any degradation due to bad drivers/ hardware problems.

system logs (unrelated to dpc) can show information on boot time eg https://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/174750-boot-times-monitor-event-viewer.html

both are tools for studying/maintaining system performance

36698997945_5fee6f84cd_o_d.jpg
 
@jpaul Sorry for the late reply, i have not had the chance to get online.

many thanks for the link , i did not know you could monitor boot times in this way, this is very useful for me and will help me monitor the performance. Thanks for the screenshots too. I will start collecting the stats i need and keep monitoring things going forward. Thanks for your help ;)
 
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