Tell me again those super low baseclock Intel mobile CPUs are a great thing. Tell me again 5.0 Ghz turbo is more than stupid marketing...
Tell it again. I dare you, I double dare you!
*I'm actually starting to consider a laptop now for decent gaming. FINALLY some real CPU power in a small package. Intel hasn't managed to do this for any continuous workload in the past decade... go figure. This is a landslide right here in AMD's favor. Even the faster Intel HQ quads I had can't hold a candle to this. DAYUM.
It even solidifies the idea that the 9900K, top end desktop MSDT performance, mind you, is within reach of smaller form factors. Crazy
I wonder if this sudden surge of enthusiast-favourite CPU brand will make reviewers learn how to test laptops.
At very least, they could say which laptop is used with each CPU.
It's certainly not in the text:
Mobile computing has become the next big target at AMD with its new series of Ryzen 4000 APUs. Today we have the first retail Ryzen 9 4900HS...
www.techspot.com
Youtube video description says which laptops were used, but without the CPU info...
Here's your 35W:
View attachment 149780
You wonder but when asked to the reason why you wonder or whether you had a point, all we heard was crickets.
And I understand why, given your usual stance on laptop CPUs. This one right here blows all your arguments away in one fell swoop. Live and learn. Intel isn't making fantastic laptop CPUs, it was shit and we could all see why, and was quickly deteriorating too with those abysmal clocks.
These benches point it out perfectly. You speak of testing properly, but it is well known among reviewers by now that laptop CPUs have predefined TDPs and reviews handily go around that, they even SPECIFY the TDP budgets now - and test it.
And as for that boosting behaviour you linked... I'll refrain from putting an Intel graph next to it, because that would just be too brutal. What I'm seeing here in your link is, by definition, a boost as you would want it. Long sustain at very good clock, only to drop down to somewhat lower performance to land at a highly efficient, but STILL performant clockspeed. And not slow down to a crawl instead. Oh, and idling? Apparently it does that better, too.
This underlines how archaic Intel's Turbo really is, even with the stupid bandaids they applied. AMD learned, clearly, from Nvidia's GPU Boost and managed to transplant most of that to its CPUs, adding even more smart logic underneath. Navi is fast going the same way, already doing most of what GPU Boost does as well. They finally got the memo. And how!