Sabtu, 25 Maret 2017

Part Of Speech



AMD's relatively low performance in some games has led to a flurry of theories, with the most popular being that the Windows scheduler bears the blame. (S+P+O)

AMD released a community update that contradicts the theories. (S+P+C)

AMD also clarified its temperature reporting methodology and announced that it's pushing an update in April to refine its power management policy. (S+P+C)

The company also released a separate blog post outlining several tweaks to get the best gaming experience. (S+P+O)

The Windows Scheduler Is Not To Blame (S+P+C)

Ryzen's unique cache topology and simultaneous multi-threading (SMT, which is akin to Intel's Hyper-Threading) has led to reduced performance in many games, which AMD claimed can be fixed through updates that allow software to interact correctly with the new architecture. (S+P+O)

Windows 7 doesn't appear to park cores as aggressively, which is likely contributing to increased performance in the older operating system. (S+P+O)

AMD also touched on the performance disparity between the balanced and high-performance power plans, and the company plans to issue an update in the April time-frame to address the issue. (S+P+O)

AMD also addressed Ryzen's somewhat confusing temperature reporting. (S+P+O)

AMD also confirmed the fact that some games perform better with SMT disabled, which we already characterized with targeted testing in our launch piece. (S+P+O)