Performance seems much the same as before, particularly because we were handling last year's Surface RT, which still ships with a Tegra 3 SoC. Browsing and loading tabs in IE11 feels snappy but then again, IE11 was supposed to be a tick faster than IE10. Overall, navigating the OS can still feel slightly sluggish, but the build we tried is at least stable. Other than that, it looks like we'll have to wait for some new ARM chips before we can revisit performance in Windows RT. Until then, don't expect us to write another 4,000 words on the subject.
Labels
- adsense (41)
- Adsense Arabic (8)
- Android (12)
- Apps (124)
- BlackBerry (3)
- EAV (46)
- ESET (47)
- ESET Username password EAV Trial (47)
- Forex (9)
- Games (481)
- iMac (2)
- iPad (12)
- iphone (1)
- iWatch (1)
- LeapPad Ultra tablet (1)
- LG (2)
- Mobile New (67)
- News (652)
- Nexus 7 (1)
- nod32 (79)
- Rémi Gaillard (3)
- Samsung (8)
- Samsung Galaxy (17)
- Sony Xperia Z Ultra (9)
- Sprint Vital (1)
- Trial (27)
- TweetDeck (1)
- Username password (46)
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Yep, Windows 8.1 RT looks just like regular Windows 8.1, performance hasn't changed
Performance seems much the same as before, particularly because we were handling last year's Surface RT, which still ships with a Tegra 3 SoC. Browsing and loading tabs in IE11 feels snappy but then again, IE11 was supposed to be a tick faster than IE10. Overall, navigating the OS can still feel slightly sluggish, but the build we tried is at least stable. Other than that, it looks like we'll have to wait for some new ARM chips before we can revisit performance in Windows RT. Until then, don't expect us to write another 4,000 words on the subject.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment