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by kllrnohj
1404 days ago
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> AMD and Intel chips usually max out at around 50-60w real-world power. That's a sweepingly broad claim that's not at all well supported. AMD & Intel both make CPUs that top out far below 50-60w real-world power and also top out far, far above 50-60W real-world power. From a different review of the same CPU (didn't check if same laptop, could be though)
"The Ryzen 7 PRO 6850U with the Linux 5.18 kernel had a 18.4 Watt average (or 16.6 Watt average with Linux 5.19 Git) while the Ryzen 7 PRO 5850U average on Linux 5.18 was up at 21.96 Watts."
https://www.phoronix.com/review/amd-ryzen7-6850u/8 So no, this isn't a 50-60W real-world power CPU. That's the non-U SKUs. But if this AMD was a 50-60W CPU that'd exactly prove my point that TDP is a stupid number to compare and you always, always have to look at actual power consumption used (which this M2 vs. 6850U didn't do because as noted briefly in the intro power monitoring of the M2 doesn't work on Asahi yet) |
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TSMC N5 only offers 15% performance OR 30% lower power vs 7nm. Peak clocks on the 6850U are 10% higher than the 5xxx generation AND is on N6 instead of N5 which offers a significantly lower advantage than what I stated. N6 offers an 18% reduction in area vs N7 while N5 offers a 45% reduction in area, so you can do your math from there.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/16236/asrock-4x4-box4800u-ren...
https://www.notebookcheck.net/R7-5800U-vs-E-2186M-vs-R7-PRO-...