cuda-nbody-newram-psave Intel Core i3-8100 testing with a LENOVO 36EB (O3QKT3BA BIOS) and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 4GB on Ubuntu 19.10 via the Phoronix Test Suite. cuda-nbody-newram-psave: Processor: Intel Core i3-8100 @ 3.60GHz (4 Cores), Motherboard: LENOVO 36EB (O3QKT3BA BIOS), Chipset: Intel Cannon Lake PCH, Memory: 32768MB, Disk: 1000GB Western Digital WD10EZEX-08W, Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 4GB (1485/4001MHz), Audio: Realtek ALC233, Monitor: ASUS PA238, Network: Intel I219-V + Intel Dual Band-AC 3165 Plus Bluetooth OS: Ubuntu 19.10, Kernel: 5.3.0-40-generic (x86_64), Desktop: LXDE 0.10.0, Display Server: X Server 1.20.5, Display Driver: NVIDIA 435.21, OpenGL: 4.6.0, Compiler: GCC 9.2.1 20191008 + CUDA 10.1, File-System: ext4, Screen Resolution: 1920x1080 CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Original (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda-nbody-newram-psave . 92.26 |============================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Cache Blocking (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda-nbody-newram-psave . 126.83 |============================================= CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Loop Unrolling (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda-nbody-newram-psave . 128.34 |============================================= CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: SOA Data Layout (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda-nbody-newram-psave . 96.16 |============================================== CUDA Mini-Nbody 2015-11-10 Test: Flush Denormals To Zero (NBody^2)/s > Higher Is Better cuda-nbody-newram-psave . 96.93 |==============================================