keithlm :
Since the dynamic overclocking feature we are discussing is is basically the same mechanism in reverse as the dynamic underclocking, with minor differences, then yes I will "go to that length" since it happens to be true and not FUD as you claim.
Are there any reports from any IT media outlets reporting any such instances? Do AMD even raise this as a possible negative?
The answers to those questions are "No", and indeed you will go to any length to FUD with your pseudo-scientific approaches to technology that you clearly can't comprehend.
Actually what is most amazing is what lengths Intel fanboys will go to to defend such a feature. I guess you have to because without that "feature" your OMG chip doesn't really do as well on benchmarks. Bummer...
The defence of the feature only occurs as a result of warding off baseless attacks from the AMDroids jealous that they can't get access to such a feature.
<YAWN> I'll be saying the same thing I'm saying now and I'll be disabling such a feature in the BIOS.
:lol: Yeah sure you will.
But then there are absolutely no rumors of such a feature being added to any future AMD chips.
It is because I give the designers at AMD credit for having far more intelligence than people incapable of understanding the Turbo boost technology. If I thought AMD were a hopeless, *** technology house, then I would take your view.
What particular benchmark... let me think... wait for it... how about ALL of them that are run in optimal conditions that do not reflect real world conditions that an average user would have. Many people will have their motherboards inside stock cases on the floor against the wall with stock cooling... OH NOES. And they won't be getting the performance that they were fooled into thinking they'd get by review sites that ran the benchmarks in optimal conditions. But oh well... cest la vie.
On the one hand you claim that Turbo boost delivers minuscule gains and then on the next you say it is a significant benchmark booster, will you ever stop talking out of both sides of your mouth?
Sure. And everybody and every company leaves it turned on. Just because of your opinion. And then after that we'll join up with the tinman and scarecrow and go look for that missing brain.
I wish you luck in your search Keith, God knows you need it.
You have nothing other than your own bitterness and bile that Intel have a feature AMD lacks(at this point in time), to make your claims that companies are turning Turbo boost off.
I guess if an IT admin is mentally ill they might, but they are so small in number as to be utterly insignificant, I mean you would only have about 2 or 3 such people on AMDZone right?
Turbo boost has never shown itself to cause performance degradation in any known report.
Whereas something like Hyperthreading in it's current incantation, can in certain circumstances, so perhaps certain businesses might turn that off.
But again, this discussion is overwhelmingly about the home user's experience and your cockamamie story about the real danger of Turbo boost causing performance degradation to such a user, is laughable in the extreme. The only danger Turbo boost presents is to offer extra performance.
Please go back up and review the above portion about the review sites running benchmarks in optimal conditions while most users will not have those conditions. Of course apparently it is acceptable to purposefully mislead people as long as it is pro-Intel.
It's not hard for anyone reading reviews to pick up that Turbo boost will work better if your cooling is better and it isn't like one needs to have a Liquid Nitrogen setup to get the full benefit of Turbo boost.
And reviews are filled with machines setup to get optimal performance, they often have the fastest hard disk money can buy, yet many average users will have slower hard disks. The machines will have RAM with faster memory timings than the average user will have, etc.