Palpatine would be proudIntel: Use these power limits on our chips
Motherboard makers:![]()
I agree 100%. The "automatic" settings and overclocks, whether in UEFI/BIOS or via software in the OS, are usually inefficient and prone to having stability problems.My i9-14900K was crashy crashy with machine checks all over the place until I went into the BIOS and backed off a bunch of settings that were over-aggressive but also the manufacturer's defaults. This wasn't observed in games, but in software compilation. Before I figured out that it was the BIOS authors messing with me, I changed the RAM, the motherboard, and the power supply with no benefits.
The 14900K is a fast CPU but these weird overclocks from the motherboard makers are a bad idea.
Motherboards are supposed to VRM throttle if the load demands more than they can supply, so unless there's some defects on the CPUs themselves (not stable at spec voltage, etc) it sounds like some vendors getting caught cutting corners on the voltage regulation. Will be interesting to see who is impacted and what the fix is.Wish the parameters would come down from the top rather than up from the bottom.
This is such a bad look for them where it feels like they and every manufacturer who uses their chips is chasing benchmarks to drive sales at the cost of stability for their customers.
Stop wasting all that power browsing Ars. Go outside. Hold your breath and stop wasting all that oxygen.The modern gamer is the equivalent to the Hummer driver of yesteryear, thumbing their nose at the environment.
Unless your primary gaming computer is a Steam Deck or something I don't believe you.My primary gaming computer tops off at 45 watts for the whole system.
It is.Unless your primary gaming computer is a Steam Deck or something I don't believe you.
Yeah, it's a number that's hard to believe. Hell, playing FarCry 6 on an old 3770k paired with a 1070ti often pulls 500 watts.Unless your primary gaming computer is a Steam Deck or something I don't believe you.
Turbo boost is often a race to idle mechanism where the total joules used is lowered by executing a task quickly and returning to a low power state.By that logic, no one should be using any kind of turbo boosting on their hardware either.
Most of the time literally more than double the power consumption for maybe 10-15% gains over non turbo clocks for the most part... not to mention the materials the bigger heat sinks/watercooling that is required, and the extra fans fans/pumps needed to run them.
Most of my gaming these days is on my Deck. Does that make it my primary gaming computer? It's well under 45W.Unless your primary gaming computer is a Steam Deck or something I don't believe you.
I ended up giving my Ryzen 9 desktop to my nephew for Christmas since I barely used it for 6 months.Most of my gaming these days is on my Deck. Does that make it my primary gaming computer? It's well under 45W.
Race to idle doesn't always pay off. If you're pulling an extra 30% power to go 1% faster, it'll be more efficient to sit at a lower power state for a bit longer.Turbo boost is often a race to idle mechanism where the total joules used is lowered by executing a task quickly and returning to a low power state.
I still hop on my very powerful gaming PC for some things, but since Balatro came out, I haven't touched it. That's dozens and dozens of hours of gaming at probably like 10W or something, including the display.I ended up giving my Ryzen 9 desktop to my nephew for Christmas since I barely used it for 6 months.
My primary gaming computer tops off at 45 watts for the whole system. The other two computers I sometimes game on have similarly low limits on CPU power (both with integrated graphics), though the whole system uses more.
Hell, pushing it to the limit my laptop gets about as warm as a cat laying in your lap.
Interesting to me is that also e.g. Core i9-14900K vs. Core i9-13900K there's only 2% overall boost.31% more power for 1-2% gains?!?
Asus' initial response to that whole fiasco went beyond unscrupulous into actively malicious until enough tech media started calling them out. They juiced everything to unsafe levels then refused to warranty anything when it went up in flames while quietly deleting culprit BIOS revisions from their website.Just want to point out that the exploding AM5 X3D processors late last year was, AFAIK, a result of board manufacturers exceeding AMD spec on SOC voltage.
These board manufacturers are unscrupulous.
I'm very aware of that, I was responding to the comment that basically said no chip should ever use turbo boost.Race to idle doesn't always pay off. If you're pulling an extra 30% power to go 1% faster, it'll be more efficient to sit at a lower power state for a bit longer.
Massively power hungry systems can get a unit of work done using less total energy if all that power is translated to more work getting done per unit time. That does not describe what Intel has been doing. Intel has gone way outside of the efficiency bell curve and is willing to burn any amount of extra power for any miniscule improvement because "big number good."
In the US, if you run a 1KW system full throttle for a year, let's say 8 hours a day it will generate a bit less than 1,200 Kg of CO2 on average (with a wide range of course based on the power generation method used). That's equivalent to burning about 130 gallons of gasoline, or about half of the average annual gas usage of a person with a driver license in the US. In Hummer terms, it's about 1,500 miles driven at 12mpg.The modern gamer is the equivalent to the Hummer driver of yesteryear, thumbing their nose at the environment.
The 13900K and 14900K are effectively the exact same CPU. They took a 13900K, boosted the clock a couple hundred MHz (3-6% boost depending on which clock you consider), and incremented the generation number. Since performance doesn't scale perfectly with clockspeed, a 1-2% increase in performance is reasonable.Interesting to me is that also e.g. Core i9-14900K vs. Core i9-13900K there's only 2% overall boost.
Long gone are days when we could see like 50% jumps in performance. Intel seems to be crawling forward with same pace as general economy and GDPs are.
The good news is if you bought Intel then being a "generation behind" actually means you're current generation.I usually prefer to stay at least one generation behind, and my needs are not really much. Going forward, cpu performance is going to be the least of what i would need and buying in on low end seems much more sensible. The products are verified, tested and cheap, and usually the last ones released on a platform.
I can't see any downsides.
And "bigger number better"Race to idle doesn't always pay off. If you're pulling an extra 30% power to go 1% faster, it'll be more efficient to sit at a lower power state for a bit longer.
Massively power hungry systems can get a unit of work done using less total energy if all that power is translated to more work getting done per unit time. That does not describe what Intel has been doing. Intel has gone way outside of the efficiency bell curve and is willing to burn any amount of extra power for any miniscule improvement because "big number good."