QuoteI have been advocating for a long time that the rules of the game be introduced for laptop manufacturers - the maximum consumption of a laptop is not more than 100W
Quote from: informatic on March 05, 2023, 12:52:25AMD ZEN 4 PhoenixOne finds in every corner that the CPU has security gaps for malware, its AI makes smart phone calls and thus competes with China.
Quote from: FARHAN on March 05, 2023, 09:22:2870-80W should be the maximum upper limit for laptop cpus, wattage. cant call any thing laptop if that pull over 100w.
If amd can deliver same performance then it should be appreciated in laptop stand point.
for me 45watt is an 8 core 14nmn chips wattage, 35w should be for 8 core 4nm chips and 70w is for 16 cores.
Quote from: Written by a ChatGPT Bot. on March 04, 2023, 18:51:32Quote from: Anonymousgg on March 01, 2023, 17:58:05Quote from: Rib on March 01, 2023, 16:13:06Since when does a CPU drawing over 120 watts is considered a "mobile processor"? Not while ago that was desktop enthusiast class... I'm wondering where this power inflation will lead us.
Blame Intel. Intel put desktop CPUs into laptops, starting with the "Alder Lake-HX" i9-12900HX and i9-12950HX.
AMD has simply taken the same concept and made it better.
I'd say more just blame x86 in general. Intel kind of became irrelevant years ago after Zen 2, so they shouldn't even be compared to or benchmarked against for efficiency.
Even though progress has been made with x86, the 10 hour battery life we are getting in todays devices were in arm devices 10 years ago. And it's still not enough. Even the most TDP limited throttled mobile x86 cpu still produces more heat and takes more power than the worst arm cpu on a samsung node.
It's no secret that when Apple switched to arm M1 SoC's there was a massive leap in efficiency and they were already considered industry leading in terms of battery life / heat / noise levels in laptops.
We should really just switch to arm for gaming already, I don't know why it hasn't been done. Games are already optimized for the switch so should be too difficult to port. Would help for the sustainability of the planet in general, using less energy and having to use fans less would reduce overall failures in general.
Quote from: Anonymousgg on March 01, 2023, 17:58:05Quote from: Rib on March 01, 2023, 16:13:06Since when does a CPU drawing over 120 watts is considered a "mobile processor"? Not while ago that was desktop enthusiast class... I'm wondering where this power inflation will lead us.
Blame Intel. Intel put desktop CPUs into laptops, starting with the "Alder Lake-HX" i9-12900HX and i9-12950HX.
AMD has simply taken the same concept and made it better.
Quote from: Ayoh on March 02, 2023, 23:58:50I Hope this will not be based on cinebench analysis as that is not well optimised for ARM processors and favours x86. Geekbench or SPEC are more suitable. Any efficiency conclusions for an ARM chip drawn from cinebench test are not really validQuote from: Andreas Osthoff on March 02, 2023, 23:23:53The information with 35W will be published in the Apple M2 Pro/Max analysis, which will be published tomorrow. But yes, the 7945HX is a bit more efficient at 35W compared to M2 Pro
Quote from: Andreas Osthoff on March 02, 2023, 23:23:53The information with 35W will be published in the Apple M2 Pro/Max analysis, which will be published tomorrow. But yes, the 7945HX is a bit more efficient at 35W compared to M2 Pro
Quotebut we also have to wait and see if there will be a sufficient number of laptop models with the new CPUsYes...very intriguing but the question is whether the Team Red reaches the right products...Zephyrus Duo is a good place to start but this model is generally severely overpriced for people who don't really need that second screen but want the specs anyway, and there's no guarantee the specs in this model will be seen in other premium Asus...
Quote from: Rib on March 01, 2023, 16:13:06Since when does a CPU drawing over 120 watts is considered a "mobile processor"? Not while ago that was desktop enthusiast class... I'm wondering where this power inflation will lead us.