I will tell ya, I have never been impressed with Cutress. He is so wrapped up in his spec marks, he just makes assumptions based on his theories and runs with them, never bothering to check if he is right or not.
So one of the reasons I like TPU is because they benchmark apps that, in my experience, *most* people actually use.
AnandTech does not. They make stupid assumptions that lead to comments like the one you just made.
For the record, millions of people use spreadsheets every single day. Many of these are highly complex, with hundreds of thousands of cells, dozens of graphs, images and scripts. I've known people who basically made a career out of knowing how to make stuff like that.
The below is not uncommon use cases. It's fairly normal for power users. And there a fuck ton load of people using apps like this, as opposed to 'using' specmarks and pov-ray.
Emperical facts. Tom's used DDR4-3200 and DDR5-4800, similar to AT.
You are looking at > 10% on a spreadsheet script due to DDR4 vs DDR5. This particular spreadsheet workload
likes bandwidth :
View attachment 223863
Oh but wait,
it can also be latency sensitive :
View attachment 223866