Quote from: phila_delphia on January 28, 2021, 07:46:21
The actual article sounds like payed content to me... Especially "argument" No. 2: Mobile GeForce Names Will Be Much Simpler For Laymen Shoppers.
Perhaps a problem lies in your understanding. The problem won't get any simpler, but
naming will (assuming they truly drop Max-Q, which still figures in the table in that article) - by obfuscating the detail. The real problem, uncertain performance, hasn't disappeared and I would argue that it hasn't gotten any bigger either. Yes, it looks like there is a bigger range of TGPs to choose from (I don't know how many there were before), but the fundamental limitation is cooling.
It would be of more use to me if a manufacturer could specify how many watts can the cooling system remove from GPU/ CPU under steady state conditions in a given environment and at what die temperature and noise. Sure, they could use a weaker version of a GPU than what the chassis can support (the only good reason I can think of is to ensure big enough steps between 3060/ 3070/ 3080). TGP would be interesting as a secondary information (they could even offer multiple TGPs). But the more common problem is the opposite. That the cooling capacity is the actual limiting factor. I won't even get into the fact that different manufacturers can target different temperatures and noise levels and that you might wonder how will they fare if you tune them to a similar level that suits you.
And it's not really as simple as that. Because CPU and GPU typically don't have completely separate cooling systems. At least they're linked by a heat pipe. It's not an unsolvable problem. But I'm looking at it as someone who can read a datasheet and do basic thermal design calculations. In the end, it might be most consumer friendly to simply advertise frame rates/ benchmark results that you should see (given configuration and settings). Both on battery and mains power. And again, the laptop should be properly heated up. If it doesn't meet it by a significant margin (around here, standard practice is 10 %), it's defective and should be returned.
Personally, I have tried elevating myself above it and simply accept that I might lose money. It doesn't have a good solution and it just brings you stress and you waste your time and energy. I say, get a good return policy.