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mikecli I mean, I'm willing to just reinstall the app if this vulnerability is one of those really obscure ones where you need to run a virus and then have the moons aligned so the hacker can read machine code in a 10 second window, type of thing.
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Which MB/BIOS you have? My X299 Dark doesn't have "Native OS support"/"MFC Override", it has only "TB3 Driver Support Enabled/Disabled". However when I ran a single thread BM, the core load would jump around all over the place -essentially it doesn't seem like the OS supports this function. mikecli I tested this out Switched the BIOS setting over to "Native OS support" instead of "MFC Override". Thank you for confirming my understanding is exactly how things would end up working. Anyone know a solution? I mean, I'm willing to just reinstall the app if this vulnerability is one of those really obscure ones where you need to run a virus and then have the moons aligned so the hacker can read machine code in a 10 second window, type of thing.
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I'm obviously wary of the apparent security vulnerability so I would prefer native OS support and not to install the IBTM app/driver again.
I tested this out Switched the BIOS setting over to "Native OS support" instead of "MFC Override". I came across the Intel article, which states that ITBM 3.0 has been discontinued but advised Windows would still support the ITBM function natively.
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Recently I upgraded my SSD so I am in the middle of a full reinstall of Windows. I was running my 9900X with 2 cores at 5Ghz and the other cores at 4.8Ghz and it seemed to be doing it's thing just fine. I tested this before monitoring HWINFO whilst running single thread benchmarks ITBM 3.0 would automatically move the workload to the top binned core (no matter the overclock). It was my understanding that overclock or no overclock it was supposed to favor faster cores for lightly threaded workloads. In any case, even if I don't figure this one out its not like I'm gonna miss it (because it is my understanding it causes much more headaches than benefits), I'm just curious what happened. Maybe it will work as a pointer for the stronger cores, but I didn't see that as an option after I add any game/application to the its list (I use Project Lasso for that type of thing, and it's much more robust). Then again, I could be reading it incorrectly. That works for you because you end up having all cores with same multiplier, correct? But if one has, for whatever reason, overclocked cores to have different multipliers (better ones higher) having Turbo Boost would still result in benefit when executing programs that benefit from favoring cores, correct?ĪFAIK, once you manually overclock (per core or all core) that program ceases any useful function. If I have to disable TB then so be it, its not like I'm gonna miss it much, it is just that mb out of the box comes with it enabled and Win10 20H2 install doesn't mention anything, they just leave warning in Device Manager.Īrestavo ZoranC Sultan.of.swing I always disable it in BIOS since i'm overclocking anyway. I was hoping for quick reply here as I don't have account there and Microsoft's Community is IMHO practically worthless with typical pre-canned replies from alleged "support" that don't seem to comprehend what is being asked before throwing them out. Thank you! I don't think Intel doesn't want it supported anymore, they seem to be making Microsoft centralized driver distribution and support point for practically everything (chipset drivers, management engine, Optane drivers. I would suspect Microsoft doesn't have much interest in supporting something not even Intel wants to support.
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Microsoft Community Windows 10 Help Forums () Intel recommended disabling it at your earliest convenience. That's a good question for Microsoft or a Windows 10 community. Ty_ger07 ZoranC So question is: is Win10 20H2 supposed to have native support for TB3 when that option is enabled in BIOS?