- Aug 25, 2001
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Interesting read. Seems to be a response to Plundervolt, yet fraught with peril.
I have a Dell XPS15 laptop with an i7-9750H in it. The fans on this thing would go nuts anytime I was plugged in and even basic tasks were being performed. And I wasn't the only one with the issue. I saw where people suggested ThrottleStop so I gave it a shot. No go, Dell had disabled it via BIOS updates at Intel's request. So I rolled back the BIOS manually and disabled auto updates so I can use ThrottleStop. It helped, doesn't completely solve my fan issue, but reduced the number of times they ramp up.
Same issue on a Dell G15 11800H laptop. They have it locked down tighter than a welded lug nut. And not just the CPU - can't adjust the TDP of the GPU manually either. Sure would love being able to choose something intermediate between 40W and 115W for noise optimization and longevity reasons. Instead have to enforce the "Silent" mode in the BIOS to artificially cap GPU power to 40W just to run at acceptable noise levels when gaming (e.g. when traveling). No undervolting of CPU or GPU possible. Afterburner doesn't work. The Alienware OC tool is locked to only Alienware models. Sad.
Repasting the TIM and undervolting my 6700HQ laptop made noise levels way better and it barely ramps under normal usage. Also a Dell model, so how much more locked down the new Dell is surprised me. Next laptop will almost certainly not be a Dell.
You do have an option now... Zen 4.My work laptop is an XPS 15 with an I9-10885H. Yes, the ridiculous pushed to the max top-of-line Comet Lake mobile CPU. I've pretty much accepted constant fan noise and a stream of heat as there is no way to have a middle ground between extreme heat max performance or the "silent" BIOS that kills performance. I've also never seen it boost above 5.0Ghz which was supposed to be the whole point of this stupid Comet Lake garbage.
That is incorrect, my option is ask IT for a new laptop, where they would give me a crappy Inspiron with a 2+8 Alder Lake-U processor like they are giving out to everyone right now. This isn't a computer I bought myself or else it would have been Zen...You do have an option now... Zen 4.
I don't know if that is true or not, or if you even need to.How is AMD an alternative on mobile when you can't undervolt them either?
1. "Intel states that the undervolting will still be available from the BIOS and is not affected by the new Undervolt Protection feature"Oh great, another thing I will have to look out for when I look to build a new PC later this year, and another reason to look at AMD unless they feel a need to follow (i.e. make people pay for more expensive low TDP SKUs instead of getting them for "free" by undervolting something with 65 or 95 W TDP)
Intel is probably just fed up with reviews showing them using 300+ W "out-of-the-box" or "at default" if this allows them to cement their recommended settings being different from full blown balls to the walls settings hte mobo makers use then it explains it all.So let me get this straight, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong...
A vulnerability in a feature that Intel removed/disabled in series 11 is the reason they disabled undervolting in series 12 and 13?
I'm kinda hoping that I've misunderstood because this makes no freaking sense. It sounds like the wood for the stable was taken to build a barn after some horses escaped and now they're taking the roof off the barn to make sure no more horses escape the stable.
That's a totally different issue and Intel could put a stop to such high out of the box power limits any day if Intel thought that was a problem. But they don't care because it benefits them.Intel is probably just fed up with reviews showing them using 300+ W "out-of-the-box" or "at default" if this allows them to cement their recommended settings being different from full blown balls to the walls settings hte mobo makers use then it explains it all.
If they would outright force everybody to use specific settings it would turn into a media circus.That's a totally different issue and Intel could put a stop to such high out of the box power limits any day if Intel thought that was a problem. But they don't care because it benefits them.
If the OEM has the choice then how is that a step back for consumers?! The consumer just has to do their research and get a mobo that supports it, someone that understands the risks can also understand the need for the additional legwork.And Intel is leaving it to the discretion of the OEM if they want to enable undervolting options or not in the BIOS. This is a step back for consumers, who should always have that option if they understand the risks.
Unless, of course, the OEM releases a BIOS update that no longer supports the function.If the OEM has the choice then how is that a step back for consumers?! The consumer just has to do their research and get a mobo that supports it, someone that understands the risks can also understand the need for the additional legwork.