Main link: Skylake Overclocking: Regular CPU BCLK overclocking is being removed
Intel has, for many years now, disabled overclocking on all but a select few, highly-priced CPUs, by fixing the maximum clock multiplier. (A practice not limited to Intel, as AMD has also done so on some series). The base clock was technically modifiable, but since it drove not just the CPU, but also RAM and PCIe clocks, you were lucky to get even a few megahertz out of it.
With their newest generation of chips, codenamed "Skylake", the PCIe domain is on a separate clock generator. While Intel officially only supported overclocking on their designated CPUs, and only on their highest-end chipset, SuperMicro, ASRock, and several other motherboard vendors produced motherboards using low-end chipsets that allowed base clock overclocking on any processor. Since this could allow extremely cheap systems to be performance-competitive with much higher-cost systems, albeit with higher cooling requirements and greater risk of failure, Intel was obviously upset.
The story is still developing (no parties have yet been willing to talk on the record, least of all Intel), but the latest BIOS update for several ASRock motherboards includes a firmware update and disabling the BCLK overclocking (the two are believed to be connected - the latest firmware prevents BCLK modification). Additionally, all marketing surrounding this unofficial-official overclocking support has been pulled. SuperMicro and other vendors have not yet done so, but unnamed sources are indicating that they will.
While it may be tempting to put the blame solely on Intel, this was clearly not a feature they intended to support, and the motherboard vendors should have been more cautious about making a feature out of bypassing a limitation on the CPUs, regardless of whether it was an artificial limitation or not. That said, I for one hope AMD's next line of CPUs is both fully competitive with Intel, and fully overclockable across the entire range. Maybe that is what is needed to force Intel to compete on price/performance again.
(Score: 2) by Hyperturtle on Thursday February 11 2016, @06:16PM
you guys. I cant even remember what I used back then, and I think I liked it!
I always wanted a black speaker box that had a computer voice that followed me eveywhere, like in wargames. I never was clear on how that same voice box existed everywhere broderick went.
if everyone at the WOPR facilitiy had one then imagine all of those computer operators having these discussions with the WOPR all at the same time in that big room for mission control. it'd be chaos! Like tricking your xbox to turn off or one person saying HEY GOOGLE and everyone's PC suddenly searching for whatever. Then again, the one guy did ask if the other guy liked vodka. It'd help in a call center environment like that.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 12 2016, @03:31AM
We had a few Acorn computers in my high school and those had some predefined words they could say if you typed the right command. So we entered commands to sleep for 5 minutes, then say something funny to whoever was in the viscinity. Of course we'd stick around to watch their reaction. Good times. :)