Intel Definitively Claims Its Laptop Chips Aren't Crashing Because of That Voltage Thing (theverge.com) 20
An anonymous reader shares a report: It's been a burning question for months -- are Intel's laptop chips susceptible to the same permanent damage that can potentially lay 24 different flagship desktop chips low? Today, Intel has finally confirmed: its 13th and 14th Gen laptop chips do not seem to have an instability issue. And the company claims they are definitely not affected by the too-high voltage issue, which it's now calling "Vmin Shift Instability." While Intel maintains that Vmin Shift Instability is not necessarily the root cause or only cause of the crashes -- it's still investigating -- Intel spokesperson Thomas Hannaford now tells The Verge that laptop chips basically aren't affected at all.
"It's been a burning question for months" (Score:4, Funny)
I see what you did there.
Re: (Score:1)
I don't.
It was never a matter of overheating.
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"Kept everyone out of breath for months"
"After months of suffocating silence"
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The method is to continue to deny until it's impossible to deny.
Intel is in trouble, but they have to avoid consequences worse than the FDIV bug.
I can confirm it! (Score:2, Troll)
I connected a few Intel CPUs to the mains and they immedately smoked. That voltage thing really is a thing! Shame on Intel!
A bit of background (Score:5, Informative)
I read an article this week saying that Intel are extending the guarantee for specific generation 13 and 14 processors from two years to five. There was something in there about a second problem (oxidation of copper after a few months use) and they only got that cleared up at the start of 2024. The processors with the extended guarantee are the boxed versions of:
Core i5-13600K(F)/14600K(F)
Core i7-13700/14700(K)(KF)(F)
Core i9-13900K/14900K(K)(KF)(F)(KS) "Raptor Lake"
Apart from the oxidation, the other problems were:
- processors running with power limits set too high (Intel had not bothered to mandate limits)
- an error in the "Turbofunction Enhanced Thermal Velocity Boost (eTVB)
- A bug in the microcode also causing processors to burn out.
I had not known about the eTVB problem but the others had been known for a while now.
This was in the German magazine C't (page 39 of issue 19) for those who also read it, and obviously the article is in German.
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I bought a 14700k based on YouTuber Jazy2Cents' recommendations over a AMD 7900x, after he released a video of all the problems he was having with this 7950x3D and unreliable memory, and about the 3D s
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That's not from msmash. It's from the article's title (the verge)
Isn't that worse? (Score:4, Insightful)
Instead of "We identified an issue" it is instead, "Sure, they're unreliable, but at least we can't figure out why!"
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Isn't that basically what Boeing said about the thrusters in Starliner?
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In this one specific instance, I'd have some sympathy for Boeing (if they weren't already systemic fuck-ups otherwise). Those thrusters are in orbit, it's not like they have an engineer handy to do a teardown on site and see what went wrong.
As they say, "space is hard".
On the other hand, Intel knows the issue isn't limited to a single chip, and they can reproduce the failure conditions in a lab any time and as often as they need to investigate. It's a much bigger embarrassment for them if they can't figur
Glad I won't have to worry (Score:2)
I'v been only using laptops for almost two decades now for daily and gaming use, so I'm glad I won't have to worry about what Intel CPU is in a used laptop when I buy a replacement in a few years or so (if I find no suitable AMD based laptop).
My empirical data backs that up (Score:2)
Re: My empirical data backs that up (Score:2)
Obfuscstion (Score:3)
Most mobile 13th and 14th gen Intel CPUs are actually rebadged Alder Lake that never had oxidation or degradation problems in the first place.
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Rebranding aka lying was my understanding of the 65w non-k "13th gen" processors as well, but Intel is now confirming that they are broken while none of the Alderlake have been identified as such. I suppose it's possible that they truly were made with the raptorlake process but intel artificially limited their memory performance to mimic the older processors.
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Some of the desktop 65w tdp chips are raptor lake. Some of them are not.
Meanwhile you can get a 12900ks or k with no degradation problems out of the box.