Steam telepítése
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Fordítási probléma jelentése
Unless we're talking a laptop, in which case a balanced power setting provided by the manufacturer can provide the best balance between performance, heat production, and battery life.
Disabling Core Parking (C6) can improve the performance, but you can't feel it, you can measure it.
If you want, you can check more options by QuickCPU.
Remember to check out the link that I posted for more information about the processor boost options.
Makes no difference in gaming as the game would be demanding better performance anyway. Only thing this would do is, maybe, improve stuff on desktop and you'd need to be recording results to compare so see any improvement, slim change at best.
Just because a core/thread is running at 100% speed all the time does not mean it's doing more. Unless the system/application need more performance it could be at max speed but the core/thread only being 10% utilised.
And I changed the minimum processor state and maximum processor state to below 100 which helps so when running my pc games the cpu does not go to 100% which some times crashes my games.
Use agressive as it is by default
If you drop min/max processor state, it will disable the boost clock and probably the current clock will be lower than the base clock , again you are losing performance, you don't limit it to 99% or whatever number you are using. If you want to use boost clock but let say you want to use it with 0.2GHz less, you can drop the processor performance boost policy.
I'd argue it's better to turn off boost, as I have never seen it make any impact to justify the noise output and energy consumption.
Then again, I only play in 60-75-144Hz modes.