- Oct 2, 2011
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Hasn't seen updates in a while. Any speculation on what might be next in store with it (if at all)?
I actually don't want a turbo boost feature in future CPU's. I'd just like to see one stock clock speed and that's it, like the days of the Core 2 series and earlier. I noticed that turbo boost can confuse some people with their chips. For example someone that owns an i5 4670k runs Coretemp and see's the chip running at 3.6GHz while running Prime 95 and tells me that he thought that it should be running at 3.4GHz and then I tell him that the 3.6GHz is the turbo boost when all 4 cores are active. Or someone that see's a 4770k chip advertised to turbo up to 3.9GHz, wonders why their 4770k chip is not turboing to 3.9GHz during a Prime 95 run and that's because only on 2 cores active it will run at 3.9GHz.
Personally, seeing what kind of headroom Intel has been leaving on the table with their 32nm and 22nm CPUs, I really wish they'd get serious about pursuing the original spirit of turbo-boost and deliver on it.
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Take that single thread, single-core, situation and boost the clockspeed to 4.5GHz or 5GHz and really make the performance sizzle.
If people are confused by turbo-boost then they are probably the same people who look at the speedometer on their dashboard and really believe their Honda Civic can go 160mph since that is the top listed speed on the speedometer.
Don't let people who are dumb enough to have first-world problems dictate the solutions to the rest of us.
I actually don't want a turbo boost feature in future CPU's. I'd just like to see one stock clock speed and that's it, like the days of the Core 2 series and earlier. I noticed that turbo boost can confuse some people with their chips. For example someone that owns an i5 4670k runs Coretemp and see's the chip running at 3.6GHz while running Prime 95 and tells me that he thought that it should be running at 3.4GHz and then I tell him that the 3.6GHz is the turbo boost when all 4 cores are active. Or someone that see's a 4770k chip advertised to turbo up to 3.9GHz, wonders why their 4770k chip is not turboing to 3.9GHz during a Prime 95 run and that's because only on 2 cores active it will run at 3.9GHz.
Take that single thread, single-core, situation and boost the clockspeed to 4.5GHz or 5GHz and really make the performance sizzle.
The yield would suck. Plus, Intel doesn't want to end up in a situation where (for instance) Skymont can't hit 4 Ghz and it loses to an earlier gen product which could turbo higher.
