In the synthetic SiSoftware Sandra 2004 and PCMark 2004 test, which server to show the performance of the entire system as well as of its individual components, Fujitsu-Siemens LifeBook S7010 BT also appears pretty efficient. Here are the results:

Well, not bad at all. The only value which strikes as kind of average is the graphics performance as measured by PCMark 2004. However, what do you expect from a laptop without a fully-fledged graphics controller? As we have already mentioned during the configuration discussion, it uses integrated graphics subsystem with 16-64MB of dynamic memory borrowed from the system RAM.
During the gaming performance tests of our Fujitsu-Siemens LifeBook S7010 BT laptop the results turned out quite OK. The video subsystem of our today’s fellow allows playing a few 3D games (which do not require DirectX 9.0 support), although only with minimum image quality settings. However, when we powered the laptop from the battery, you will hardly be able to enjoy comfortable gameplay (you can notice an evident “slide-show” effect on the screen). Of course, in this case the performance drops down a lot, as the notebook works in power-saving mode. The results obtained in 3DMark 2001 SE Pro illustrate very nicely how fast this system can be with different image quality settings applied:


In Quake3 we ran the benchmarks for two different image quality settings:
- 640x480: 16 bit; Lighting: Vertex; Detail: Low; Texture Quality: 16 bit; Texture Filter: Bilinear
- 1024x768: 32 bit; Lighting: Lightmap; Detail: High; Texture Quality: 32 bit; Texture Filter: Tri-linear.
Here are the obtained results:

And in the form of a diagram:






