Originally posted by: mariok2006
are they software of hardware based? if i use a program that changes the cpu multiplier based on power need...will toggling it much affect my processors longetvity?
im pretty sure they are software based...just wanted to ask...
Originally posted by: tallman45
Software,
There is not 10x of something vs 9x physically built into a processor
In other words if you were to disect a 9x vs a 10x processor they would have and equal amount of parts
Originally posted by: stevty2889
Originally posted by: tallman45
Software,
There is not 10x of something vs 9x physically built into a processor
In other words if you were to disect a 9x vs a 10x processor they would have and equal amount of parts
It's still done by hardware. They are fused a particular way to lock in the max multiplier(on chips with speedstep, or cool and quiet you can use lower multies, but not higher). It's not the number of parts, it's the way it's fused.
EDIT: Argh, not good at spelling early in the morning.
Not at all. Your motherboard will do it alot more often than you will, if you leave it at stock settings.Originally posted by: mariok2006
so does it affect my CPU longevity if i use a program that constantly changes the multipliers? it is a 1.83 core due processor with the yonah chipset.
Originally posted by: lopri
I've heard it's something like a 'firmware' that requires both special machinery and software.
Originally posted by: mariok2006
Originally posted by: stevty2889
Originally posted by: tallman45
Software,
There is not 10x of something vs 9x physically built into a processor
In other words if you were to disect a 9x vs a 10x processor they would have and equal amount of parts
It's still done by hardware. They are fused a particular way to lock in the max multiplier(on chips with speedstep, or cool and quiet you can use lower multies, but not higher). It's not the number of parts, it's the way it's fused.
EDIT: Argh, not good at spelling early in the morning.
so does it affect my CPU longevity if i use a program that constantly changes the multipliers? it is a 1.83 core due processor with the yonah chipset.