Opera’s performance on IE9 speed demos

June 4th, 2010 § 10

IE9 preview has been making wonderful improvement. It started first with web standards improvement, and now speed progress. Though far from release and still a non-production, it is interesting to see from IE’s own demo that they are beating FF, Safari and Google Chrome.

Friends at IE might have been busy that they missed out on testing Opera. Still it’s heartening that in their demo, Opera icon was used as a test image. So i guess since Microsoft is a little occupied, why not I’ll run it and see how Opera fares.

In A Closer Look at Internet Explorer 9 Hardware Acceleration Through Flying Images , IE9’s demo works in the form of showcasing it’s hardware acceleration ability. IE9 could ramp up more FPS (frames per second) than Safari, Chrome and FF. It logged an impressive 52 FPS, 2nd placed FF was 8.3 FPS.


IE9’s Flying image demo

I decided to try out the stable version of Opera 10.53 and it gave me between 57- 60 FPS while on my machine IE9 hovered between 35 to 38 fps. I tested on VMWare Windows Vista SP2 on my Macbook. Another point observed is that in IE9 the “test image” which are browser vendor icons took significantly longer to load. The test actually started without me seeing the full image in IE9.

So from my first test, Opera 10.53 without hardware acceleration pulls in about 60% faster than IE9 preview with hardware acceleration.

Let’s move on to the 2nd test – A GPU-Powered HTML5 Flickr Photo Viewer.


IE9’s Flickr photo viewer demo

In Seth McLaughlin (Program Manager for IE Performance) ’s own words “With Internet Explorer 9, Flickr Explorer is generally able to maintain a near real-time responsiveness of 52fps (52 frames per second). In contrast, other browsers struggle to maintain 4-8fps, which is barely 15% the performance”.

This time, Microsoft forgot to test Opera too (actually Microsoft didn’t forget Opera everytime, they did remember to compare Opera when they created a standards table. The table only showed test cases submitted by Microsoft to W3C, and IE9 passed all of them.) More about IE9 Standards discussion in my previous post.

OK, now let’s take a look at the results. As the demo loads, Opera jumps from a low of 20 FPS to 60 FPS within, say, 3 seconds. But once the flickr images stabilized, it remained at 60 FPS. IE9 was similar that it logged 60 FPS once the images stablized, but before it did it hovered between 3-6 FPS for a minute (I counted 61 seconds) and images were obviously draggy.

So the conclusion is that IE9 have a 60 FPS “real-time” rendering, but not before taking a minute between 3-6 FPS. Opera took 3 seconds to hit 60 FPS “real-time”. If forced to compare, Opera would be 20,000% faster.

There you have it. Opera’s performance.

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§ 10 Responses to “Opera’s performance on IE9 speed demos”

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  • Chas4 says:

    Getting about 60 fps took a few seconds  http://ie.microsoft.com/testdrive/Performance/01FlyingImages/Default.html and it is not even running on a native windows environment (I am using the current test build of Opera 10.6 alpha (3403) in wine via cross over on my Mac 2.33ghz dual core w/ 3 gb of ram and 256 mb of video ram

    Here is the proof
    http://my.opera.com/Chas4/albums/showpic.dml?album=551911&picture=48825932

  • AlastairC says:

    Whilst I got similar results for Opera, I did get better results for IE on a native windows machine (which is less powerful than my MBP).
    For example, it didn’t drop below 30 FPS on the flickr example for me.

    I’m not sure it’s fair to compare via VMware, which may not be able to utilise the hardware acceleration. (Please correct me if I’m wrong on that?)

  • The Internet says:

    VMware workstation’s acceleration support is very, very sketchy. Only in version 7 (released this past February) has acceleration been sufficient to run Aero. Since IE9 is likely to rely heavily on exotic acceleration APIs, and VMware has not traditionally focused on graphics performance, your tests are misguided at best, and propaganda at worst. Use native hardware.

  • Nick says:

    Running Opera on Windows 7. You are right, Opera is getting high FPS but I see the Opera Window blinking (e.g. the background going dark several time while it tryes to draw/refresh logos). Is it a bug or by design?

    IE9 works very well indeed!

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  • zibin says:

    AlastairC & The Internet,

    You’re right. Using VMWare to test isn’t the best choice, especially when IE9 is dependant on hardware acceleration. I should find time to test it again with native machine.

    Still, Opera has no hardware acceleration switched on too.

  • John says:

    I checked out Opera 10.53 to compare to IE9 running natively on my Windows 7 machine… My personal was that Opera relative performance vs. IE9 varied in the range of 2-3X lower frame rate at 20-25% MORE resource utilization vs. the better performing IE9.

    On the flying logo test, I ran 256 flying logos and Opera was around 10-15 fps, while IE9 was 30-35 fps.

    Not “scientific”, but IE9 appears to beat Opera handily on the flying logo test. That said, Opera and IE9 performance were surprising close on the Flickr images test.

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