Quote from: Sinocelt on July 19, 2020, 08:37:26
This laptop is everything I want. Now we'll have to see how much it costs. If it's a lot more expensive than a Renoir laptop despite being significantly slower (CPU-wise), then it'll look a lot less appealing.
Quote from: ariliquin on July 16, 2020, 12:14:33Why would Intel help design laptops with AMD processors? Ask AMD why they're not helping OEMs more with their laptop designs.
Where's our AMD option? Better security, performance and power consumption. If i'm paying for the best I want the best CPU.
Quote from: Anonym on July 15, 2020, 20:05:09I use hibernation. I thought it's well known that sleep is vulnerable. So, why would any sane and responsible person use sleep? But even that doesn't fully protect you. If you're relying on a post boot authentication and your boot drive is encrypted, then it has to be decrypted before you're authenticated. Oops. I don't even want to touch the topic of leaving laptops unattended in untrusted environments. How can you leave a laptop with sensitive data behind? Yes, mistakes happen but a mistake like this can ruin your career. It's one thing to be worried about it happening (which keeps you on your toes), it's another to actually screw up like this.
Full memory encryption *is* the solution, just not to the problem you are thinking about. It's a laptop, so it can easily get stolen or left behind. There are data security requirements (as in compliance) that are solved just by encrypting all data on the harddrive. The thing is, if your machine is in sleep mode instead of powered off, your data can still be stolen from RAM -- unless RAM is also fully encrypted, then it has the same security as the data on that encrypted harddrive.
Quote from: Anonym on July 14, 2020, 19:24:10No I was actually referring to why they skipped ICL, it was likely because it didn't have vPro. No stance regarding the lack of AMD but I'm guessing AMD's not being helpful enough with their support.Quote from: S.Yu on July 14, 2020, 18:36:28Ryzen Pro not only has a vPro equivalent (AMD DASH), but also features full RAM encryption (not just in the SGX enclave) and even has ECC memory support built into the silicon (while in Intel you'll need a Xeon).
Ah ha, because TGL has vPro.
Too few ports but otherwise impressive looking package.
Quote from: _MT_ on July 15, 2020, 13:22:33Full memory encryption is not the solution. You can find papers on that topic. And in particular Epyc's memory encryption was breached. Again, this feature is aimed at virtualization. I don't share hardware so I don't feel the heat of these problems as much.Full memory encryption *is* the solution, just not to the problem you are thinking about. It's a laptop, so it can easily get stolen or left behind. There are data security requirements (as in compliance) that are solved just by encrypting all data on the harddrive. The thing is, if your machine is in sleep mode instead of powered off, your data can still be stolen from RAM -- unless RAM is also fully encrypted, then it has the same security as the data on that encrypted harddrive.
Quote from: 123 on July 15, 2020, 00:36:12FireWire suffered from the same vulnerability. It comes with RDMA. Great for performance, bad for security. It was a well known issue. Dealing with it costs money. And it wasn't seen as important enough. To customers. Because they ultimately pay for it. And the solution was a side effect - it was primarily about sandboxing virtual machines. It's a similar story with credit cards, for example. They only put out fires that actually burn them.Quote from: Nemo7 on July 14, 2020, 22:23:20TB3 is a vulnerability-riddled mess - just like Intel CPUs.
Remember when they were mad at OEMs for not including Thunderbolt in more AMD laptops without knowing that thunderbolt is an Intel innovation. They should be glad that Intel is allowing everyone including AMD to use it in the first place. Intel even donated the TB3 to the latest USB4 standard to help the industry adaption.
...
While I have no big love for AMD, they provide the most reasonable alternative to flawed Intel products at this point. From security standpoint, current AMD CPUs are designed better. For starters, they support full memory encryption unlike Intel, whose CPUs even in 2020 encrypt small enclave of memory at best, via SGX - which itself is a vulnerability-ridden mess.