I have used ABC for over 3 months now, and ever since the beginning, it randomly freezes my PC (including mouse/sound/keyboard etc.) for 5/10 seconds at a time, then everything is back to normal for 5/10 seconds then it freezes again. Only when you close all open programs (Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, MSN Messenger, ABC etc.) does it stop freezing, but then the Internet stops working (i.e. after the first freeze occurs, then no program can access the Internet). Only a restart works. My system/software specifications are below:
ABC v2.6.1 (using the Shad0w's Bittorrent experimental S-5.8.7 core)
Windows XP Professional (SP1)
Asus A7N8X Deluxe (nForce 2)
AMD Athlon XP 2700+
512 MB PC2700 DDR-RAM (DDR333)
Sapphire Atlantis Radeon 9800 Pro (128 MB)
Western Digital 80 GB 7,200 RPMS Special Edition (8 MB Cache) (x2)
Any ideas?
PS. It used to happen when I used to run Shad0w's Bittorrent (before I started to use ABC), so I assume it has something to do with the core (that Shad0w created).
It is silly there is no simple way to check whether this profile has been activated. CFRs are normal, but trying to even hide the fact if it's on / off seems silly, especially for something so user-facing.
Surely Microsoft is "proud" of their engineering efforts on this one and ought to display it somwhere in the GUI.
Many Linux distros are not known for excellent battery life, so I'm not sure that is the best example.
A more apt example may be Apple, but Apple's CPUs are simply far more efficient than Intel & AMD at single-threaded tasks like these, so "boosting" is not as power-hungry and less heat-inducing. Not to mention Apple will hardly engage P-cores for basic UI tasks; they use a pretty complicated QoS scheme to only activate P-cores for more serious workloads like HTML / JS execution or decompression or application launch.
Microsoft is (smartly) doing it for launch, but also for UI tasks, which is the more nonsensical part: why ... do Windows 11's UIs need modern CPUs to boost? It should load so quickly that there's not even time for the CPU to boost.
I've not seen any controlled testing and, judging by Microsoft's mentality, within a year, they'll have added so much more bloat, it'll undo any perceptible latency benefit and we'll have boosted the CPU clocks for nothing.
It depends: heat soak is a thing.
Initially on cold boot-up, the heatsinks & heatpipes are at ambient temp. After heatsinks & heatpipes warm up (through normal usage), they don't immediately cool to ambient temp when the load goes away. So their baseline is higher and the trigger point for fans is much less stress.
Add a few more CPU spikes → it's too hot to stay at the same fan RPM → fans get triggered to start up up much sooner / get triggered to ramp much more quickly.
Question
Elliot B.
I have used ABC for over 3 months now, and ever since the beginning, it randomly freezes my PC (including mouse/sound/keyboard etc.) for 5/10 seconds at a time, then everything is back to normal for 5/10 seconds then it freezes again. Only when you close all open programs (Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, MSN Messenger, ABC etc.) does it stop freezing, but then the Internet stops working (i.e. after the first freeze occurs, then no program can access the Internet). Only a restart works. My system/software specifications are below:
ABC v2.6.1 (using the Shad0w's Bittorrent experimental S-5.8.7 core)
Windows XP Professional (SP1)
Asus A7N8X Deluxe (nForce 2)
AMD Athlon XP 2700+
512 MB PC2700 DDR-RAM (DDR333)
Sapphire Atlantis Radeon 9800 Pro (128 MB)
Western Digital 80 GB 7,200 RPMS Special Edition (8 MB Cache) (x2)
Any ideas?
PS. It used to happen when I used to run Shad0w's Bittorrent (before I started to use ABC), so I assume it has something to do with the core (that Shad0w created).
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