Since my curiosity often gets the better of me, I decided to run some experiments on a Zotac ZBOX, which is a HTPC with an Nvidia ION chipset, 2GB RAM. Basically, it's not powerhorse of a system and it gets the job done for basic needs. Think Netbook in the formfactor of a tiny box you can hang on the back of your monitor or TV.
Initially, we got this little box in 2009 and it had XP set up on it. It was clearly a "bare essentials" kind of system. You can browse but it was choppy, and you could watch standard definition (SD) videos with no trouble, but run an HD video on it and you could see it struggle and sweat.
A while back I set up Win7 on it and it was performaing surprisingly better than XP. It could handle the "Aero" look but it certainly did better with the classic look. I switched the resolution down to 1366x768 to compensate. It was clearly a low-end system but it got the job done.
I installed XBMC and set it up as a multimedia HTPC, but even XBMC chugged a bit on it. Overall, it was a passable user experience and you could watch stuff on it with relative ease.
Anyway, down to current events, I just decided to wipe it and I installed Win8.1 on it.
Holy monkey.. This is where the "behind the scenes" enhancement of Win8's architecure really shows. The ZBOX is performing markedly better than I had ever seen, even at 1080p. I am thoroughly impressed with how smooth it's running compared to before (with WinXP and Win7). XBMC is a lot smoother too.
With the ION chipset, this system is basically an equivalent to a tablet or other portable device, which Win8 was built to run on as well. There's definitely a lot to be said for Windows 8.1 that's not on the surface. I suppose I have to admit that something good for PCs came from the industry-wide push for portable devices.
Next up, I'm gonna test it out on an HP mini 210-2060 with an Intel Atom chipset, 1GB RAM, which came originally with Windows 7 Starter (WTF) but currently has Ubuntu 14.04 running on it.