AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370: 100+ Benchmarks Validate Zen 5's Captivating Power Efficiency & Performance
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Originally posted by Errinwright View PostWhat exactly does Proton do, when the laptop is run in a Linux environment vs Windows environment?
I already have a laptop with Pluton and I've been running Fedora (with secure boot) on it without any issues.
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Originally posted by avis View Post
Here's a nice overview, not going to retell it:
I already have a laptop with Pluton and I've been running Fedora (with secure boot) on it without any issues.
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Originally posted by avis View Post
Yeah, I was about to say the same, the new part has 50% more cores yet it doesn't excel over 7840HS/U that much.
It's extremely power efficient though, I'll give it that. Zen 4 owners may not need to apply, previous generations laptop owners will see massive improvements.
Overall a decent job but I expected a tad more. It's kinda jarring to see 7840HS beating this new CPU in multiple benchmarks. I don't remember that being the case previously.
As a 7840HS owner, I'm looking forward to Zen 6/RDNA 4.0 or if Intel finally digs itself out of the grave, whatever Intel comes up with next (and I'm not talking about Lunar Lake).
I'm rooting for Intel to have strong lineups, too.
I hope energy aware scheduling can finish some of the work they had left. I think I recall Hector Martin saying it needed work to be mainlined / revised (at least for Apple M series) and the EAS docs said SMT is not yet accounted for.
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Originally posted by avis View PostCore to core latency is alarming:
oryon_c2c.png
This is where the OS scheduler awareness is of utmost importance. Michael mentions that currently Linux is lacking in this regard, which might explain some of the unusual results in this article.
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