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Archived from groups: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell (More info?)
I ask this question out of curiosity rather than special need to know, but
maybe others are interested. I understand the Series 600 P4s (now in Dell
8400's) now bring "speed step" technology to the desktop, and WinXP SP2 will
be aware of this and step down the CPU when the load is light or maybe even
in response to rising temperature. I guess a P4 running at full speed can
consume something like a hundred watts. So what is the real-world power draw
of the CPU when there's no load? Will I really find the system using
significantly less power when it's not busy?
I ask this question out of curiosity rather than special need to know, but
maybe others are interested. I understand the Series 600 P4s (now in Dell
8400's) now bring "speed step" technology to the desktop, and WinXP SP2 will
be aware of this and step down the CPU when the load is light or maybe even
in response to rising temperature. I guess a P4 running at full speed can
consume something like a hundred watts. So what is the real-world power draw
of the CPU when there's no load? Will I really find the system using
significantly less power when it's not busy?