Originally posted by: alyarb
dude, they're measuring AC power, and the efficiency of the power supply increases as the load on the unit increases.
you can't just throw together a 200W machine full of low power components, hook it up to a 500W power supply and test it on the AC side and expect any of your data to be worth a damn because the 500 W unit will reach its peak efficiency when it's loaded around 400W, and the efficiency steadily increases as you approach this number.
the AC-DC conversion may very well have been more efficient with the higher-clocked CPU, but since they don't even mention what unit they're doing the conversion on i can't accept any of the data because there's nothing consistent to compare it to.
if you test only the DC going into the CPUs you will find that the 2.6 GHz CPU idles with less power than the 2.8 GHz CPU, and that would be considered useful data.
The efficiency reality is such that from a CPU perspective it
overestimates just how low the power consumption could be with a higher efficiency PSU.
So yes to be sure that 100W idle number would be all the more lower had the reviewer used a higher efficiency PSU at that point on the power-consumption curve. And to be sure the 110W number would be lower as well.
But no amount of optimal PSU efficiency matching is going to reverse the actual rankings, the system consuming 110W is not suddenly going to consume even less power than the system consuming 100W if both systems are outfitted with a higher efficiency PSU. (this is where your post gets wonky because you really have to start constructing boundary conditions to make your case valid - i.e. "well maybe they used different PSU", etc, those are assumptions you are now making so as to make your conclusions valid...you can do it but it does little to convince me)
If you are really interested in isolating just the CPU's power-consumption at the socket (which is not its footprint on your electricity bill) I just go to lostcircuits as they all the work necessary to isolate it.
Windows Power Consumption (Idle), CnQ Enabled
But I disagree with you that measuring power-consumption at the wall is useless or without value. I measure my system's power-consumption at the wall (kill-a-watt) and it tells me information I have routinely found to be helpful and useful. Yes the PSU's subtly changing efficiency over the power-range of a rigs idle to load parameters does result in an overestimation of the power-consumption values of the components downstream of the PSU but that is what error-bars and boundary conditions are for.
The thing with Anand's data, any reviewers who tally their power-consumption like that, is the data lends itself readily to analysis that need precision versus accuracy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accuracy_and_precision
Provided the same PSU is used (or just one with a similar efficiency power curve) the resultant data will have high precision, but yes as you say it will lack accuracy (that is the efficiency of the PSU)...precision is great for taking delta's. If you wanted to know how much more power-consumption a i7 975 takes over an i7 920 then you'd want higher precision, not accuracy, in your data so that your delta value has lower error-bars.
(BTW you'll note you can't measure the power-consumption of Nehalem-derived CPUs such as Lynnfield or Bloomfield at the socket...you have to go the "at the wall" route)