Quote from: LL on September 10, 2023, 00:31:15You think a computer user 10 to 100 years old should have to get into what is Throttlestop?
Is that your defence for a simple computer that do not have a powerful GPU, don't have a powerful CPU but still makes high noise that need to be babysitted?
I was referring to your comment about 52 Watts and I even specifically quoted you on that, nothing else. If you find
normal behaviour of boosting that high
for 1.2 second to be problematic then you can use Throttlestop and limit that to 15W if you want. I doubt that majority of computer users 10 to 100 years old will find that to be a problem though.
And regarding unnecessarily loud fan that will hopefully get fixed by a BIOS update, that's on HP to deal with. Lenovo often has those same problems and they pretty much always fix them when they push an update (BIOS). If HP doesn't fix it then it's a product to ignore because there really is no reason to be as loud as it is. But other than that it's a pretty nice laptop and I quite like it despite not being a particular "HP-person".
Quote from: LL on September 10, 2023, 00:31:15This when a 200 euro smartphone is totally silent doing same stuff...
There is a physical fan inside of a smartphone?
Edit: I went to check what Intel says about max turbo power for this specific CPU and it is 55W (
https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/232153/intel-core-i51335u-processor-12m-cache-up-to-4-60-ghz.html ). It's not even 1.2s anymore but much shorter, it used to be 1.2 from 10th to 12th gen.