mirh

Tinkerer

Comments

  • I don't know what kind of awful automated reply was that. Your gpu can do whatever refresh rate it pleases, as long as the HDMI output still has the required bandwidth (and HDMI 2.0 can totally do 240hz in full hd). The problem is that according to the specs of your monitor, that only comes with HDMI 1.4. I doubt that it…
  • If it can help, leaving my computer idle overnight had memory usage untouched. On the other hand, I just found out even just closing and reopening most programs (Steam, Blender) causes it to budge a few hundreds kilobytes. What are you doing (in both QAAdminAgent and AppMonitorPlugin) to be prying the other processes?
  • That's not the right column...IIRC the default one is just the private working set of physical memory. If you fire up some memory intensive application (I don't know, games? blender? chrome with two tabs?) Windows will justly flush much of it to the page file and profit. But the virtual memory will still be through the…
  • My system had an uptime of 50 days tbh. With more or less as many cycles of sleep and wake (your utilities seem especially not to like btw, like acer care center deciding out of the blue that it is "still initializing") And to be fair it wasn't physical memory per se that it was stealing, but what resource monitor calls…
  • This is still a problem in 2022 btw. Version 3.0.3038.0.
  • More or less the same that happened to me. Literally last week I had no problem having my SN/SNID recognized on the US website, when suddenly my 4 months Nitro 5 became a museum piece. And even if at least the Italian website still detected it properly for some extra time, today not even that is good anymore. Phone…
  • Wrong linkThen, yeah, I guess like their laptops didn't even see much improvements from undervolting with Comet Lake. But they were relatively far from 100°C to be begin with (with the only exception of the very heavy blender test). Not so much instead for my Nitro that touches it on every mildly intensive task. Also, very…
  • I could argue I have yet to see or hear any real world attacker having used speculative executions flaws. Also, it's not like you cannot already disable all other mitigations straight from the OS (and those are the vulnerabilities that could be very theoretically exploited from a browser, unlike voltage control that…
  • That setting has been unlocked for years before 2020, and CPUs already have a trainload of protections to avoid thermal damage. Hell, I could even argue that now that people cannot even undervolt anymore (on such insanely hot processors none the less), this is going to increase
  • It's not locked out at the "hardware level". It's a simple hidden value in the bios to toggle the so called "Overclocking Lock" on. I wish OEMs could see the incredible value of letting the user handle that.
  • Nope, you still need to do the hidden variables trick if you want that. It's really sinful that on such hot cpus we can't control that out of the box. At least I wish acer could confirm it's made out of fear of warranties, explicit indication by intel to fix the plundervolt vulnerability, or whatever. p.s. take note that…
  • The only thing I could notice is that in the acpi tables, method NPCF ("NVPCF DSM"?) is slightly changed.
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