|
|
|
|
|
by variaga
2255 days ago
|
|
The pins don't physically wiggle. "pins wiggling" is a common metaphor for "the voltage level on a pin is changing". As a signal driver is toggled at increasing frequencies ('cranking up the clock'), the signal amplitude (voltage difference between the 'high' and 'low' period) starts to drop. At a high enough frequency, the signal will be indistinguishable from noise and 'stops wiggling'. |
|
It's not that the signal will be indistinguishable from noise, but that the CPU will stop working correctly, so its outputs will stop toggling (or will toggle in unexpected ways).