But I thought that the UEFI GUI is nothing more than a front-end to the actual code behind it. AMD writes the code, the board maker slaps a theme on top of it, and ships it out the door.
No? Plenty of vendor-specific features in past years (dynamic OC switcher, KomboStrike), different vendor implementations of the various PBO menus, randomly removed/lobotomized VDDG controls on MSI..............how else do you think every few months some vendors have functional BIOSes on a given AGESA while others have BIOSes on same AGESA bugged to all hell or absolutely tanking performance?
The board makers are low effort for a different reason - basically just developing one BIOS for a new AGESA release, making minor changes here and there, and then just Ctrl+V it across their entire lineup. Problems with a specific board? Cross that bridge when you get to it.
Hence why I keep telling people to stop salivating after the newest AGESA like it's the year's new iPhone. If it ain't broke and doesn't have something new you absolutely need, don't fix it.
Wouldn't he already have known this? Why didn't he run a more strenuous test and put load on the SoC rails then?
He did mention that "he thinks" this is a temperature sensor issue that's not working. The CPU he had in his hands (7900X) got so hot the IHS melted off from being soldered to the cpu die. Gees.
This was on a Gigabyte board too.
I really have no idea how widespread these issues are but I dont see too many TechPowerup forum members reporting too many problems with their respective cpu's.
I think he did say he didn't want to kill the CPU lol. But he could've run some Prime95 large FFT, a memory heavy Ycruncher stress, or even some TM5 if he wanted to see more VDDCR_SOC power draw. For AM5 I feel like it's more obvious since VSOC is specifically focused on iGPU and UMC now, with most of Fabric being spun off into Vmisc (where it was previously all under SOC on AM4). It was just weird to me - manually set VSOC............in order to stress Vcore? lol
AMD prides themselves on extensive and comprehensive temperature monitoring with a lot of sensors (hundreds?) scattered throughout their CPUs and GPUs, so I feel like it would have to be a wider problem than just 1 malfunctioning temp sensor that Tctl/Tdie forgot to pick up.
Granted, to see the darkened pads, TPU AM5 users would all have to physically remove their CPUs for inspection on systems that worked just fine, but agreed, more investigation and less hysteria.