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So yesterday quite unexpectedly I happened upon two reviews - one from Steve of Hardware Unboxed, one from Linus of tech tips fame showing the same problem with the new i9-9900K CPU from Intel. (Actually the second review is of a different processor but the same problem is evident there.)
The gist of the problem is this - Intel specced the the i9-9900K at a 95W TDP yet the motherboards designed to mate with it are all loaded with firmware and specs designed to run this processor at closer to 140W TDP - the initial reviews all used such motherboards, artificially inflating the 9900K's performance score. Yet when a user actually plugs this into a board with a 95W TDP they will achieve noticeably lower performance. And cooling a 140W processor is no joke - as AMD Bulldozer users can attest.
Underlying this story is a bigger one - that having run out of legitimate options of improving what they have based on their 14nm++ process node Intel has resorted to underhanded media manipulation.
AdoredTV's analysis of last year predicting Intel is doing this based on a different but similar case with the 8th gen Coffee Lake CPUs:
The gist of the problem is this - Intel specced the the i9-9900K at a 95W TDP yet the motherboards designed to mate with it are all loaded with firmware and specs designed to run this processor at closer to 140W TDP - the initial reviews all used such motherboards, artificially inflating the 9900K's performance score. Yet when a user actually plugs this into a board with a 95W TDP they will achieve noticeably lower performance. And cooling a 140W processor is no joke - as AMD Bulldozer users can attest.
Underlying this story is a bigger one - that having run out of legitimate options of improving what they have based on their 14nm++ process node Intel has resorted to underhanded media manipulation.
AdoredTV's analysis of last year predicting Intel is doing this based on a different but similar case with the 8th gen Coffee Lake CPUs: