Review: Intel Digital Home Capabilities Assessment Tool

by Bob Crabtree on 21 December 2005, 09:57

Tags: Intel (NASDAQ:INTC)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaeb7

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Lab notes 1 - setting the scene


James Smith, recently engaged as HEXUS' Manager of Performance Analysis, has a long pedigree in benchmarking and system integration, most recently with luxury custom-PC builder SavRow.

That, however, didn't save him from drawing the short straw and carrying out our initial tests of V1.0.0 of the evaluation release of IDHCAT - Intel’s first attempt at producing a benchmarking program that is capability-based rather than synthetic/application performance-based.

The experience was less than impressive as you'll quickly gather from his lab notes - even though the company would appear to be going in the right direction.

HEXUS.labs - initial assesment of Intel DHCAT 1.000 Evaluation Release by James Smith
IMHO, Intel's Digital Home Capabilities assessment Tools still needs some work before it becomes useable for anyone testing PCs built for the UK market.

I failed in my first attempt to install the benchmark because (as other HEXUS reviewers discovered), the install defaults to the PC's system drive and will not go ahead unless that drive has at least 20GB of free space. It doesn't matter if you have many hundreds of GB free on other drives, that space, seemingly, doesn't count!


IDHCAT requires 20GB free on the C: drive!IDHCAT requires 20GB free on the C: drive even if 100s of GB are free on other drives!

After resolving this issue - by freeing up the required space - I was able to get the program installed.


intel_dhcat_driversDrivers that IDHCAT installs

I then ran some scores and took some screen shots of the interface.

IDHCAT - opening screenIDHCAT - opening screen



IDHCAT getting ready to do a test runIDHCAT - Getting ready to do a test run by creating a new test

The interface itself - IMHO - is pretty intuitive and easy-to-use. However several sections of the benchmark prevent you from task-switching as they use the windows “always on top” window property – causing the window to fill the entire screen ('create a new test' is one screen for sure where this occurs).