One of the main problems with Adobe Flash Player is it's lack of support for 64 bit browsers. This was never really a problem in the past but since the release of IE 8 x64 on 64 bit systems, people want to make use of the capabilites that 64 bit brings.
The comment about clock speeds not changing is actually not really true. Due to aggressive power management, clock speeds on an idle system are lower now than they have been in decades. It isn't uncommon for a laptop to be hovering right around 1GHz if it isn't working on anything. Yes you right that more work gets done with each cycle, but you are still dealing with a nearly 5x difference between low and high power states, which can change how snappy the interface feels.
I totally agree with you about the action center and other Windows UI elements taking a shameful amount of CPU cycles to do basic functions, but I see that as a separate conversation.
While I do agree with the "don't sweep that under the rug" concern, I also don't want to get into a debate about what things deserve a boost or not. In my opinion, boost all the things, get the full value from your CPU.
Keep in mind, we are talking about milliseconds of boosting, it isn't meaningfully going to change power consumption.
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Nick Brunt
One of the main problems with Adobe Flash Player is it's lack of support for 64 bit browsers. This was never really a problem in the past but since the release of IE 8 x64 on 64 bit systems, people want to make use of the capabilites that 64 bit brings.
Adobe say that they are working on support for 64 bit browsers and that it will be implemented in a release soon after 10.1 (which has just come out as a developer release).
http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/000/6b3af6c9.html
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