Highly technical PC users tend to be a skeptical bunch when it comes to assessing new technology. Not all are convinced that the Windows Experience Index is meaningful. "What a great way for geeks to compete for the highest score," wrote one person on a ZDNet.com forum. "I doubt there is a meaningful way to compare the score to the subjective feeling of how a given (PC) will work. It just seems like just a braggin’ rights kind of thing."
Well, bragging rights do matter to some. Why else would 1,500 people have posted their Windows Experience Index scores on ShareYourScore.com in the first five months after the website launched? But this is hardly the only reason to try for a top index score. Any PC that even comes close to a 5.9 will also let you play the most demanding games at the highest resolutions, keep a dozen big programs all running at once, and handle just about any task you can throw at it.
ShareYourScore.com exists to let PC users compare their index scores, and compare notes on how they achieved their score. Slightly less than 1 percent of the first 1,500 posters achieved a 5.9, with 5 percent scoring 5.5 or higher. The average index score is a modest 3.9. (Full disclosure: I only achieved 4.4 on my new home PC and 3.5 on my work PC.)
ShareYourScore.com is the brainchild of Sander Gerz, a software developer from the Netherlands who spotted the need for a place where people could compare hardware and index scores. Gerz is not among the elite 1 percent, or even the top 5 percent. In fact, he was dismayed to find that the first Windows Vista-based PC he built scored only 3.4. That was with an early beta version of Windows Vista and on a PC he designed more for silent operation than speed, so he wasn’t too disappointed. But at the time, he had no idea if his index score was good or bad.
"I was curious to see how other systems performed," writes Gerz, who also operates the devtips.net website (in Dutch) for programmers. He noticed people discussing their scores in various online forums and exchanging screen shots of their scores. There must be a better way to compare, he thought, so he created ShareYourScore.com.
With more than 1,500 visitors a day, the website has become more popular than he imagined. "People really like to show off their scores," Gerz says.