For the sake of convenience, I hope my CPU is ok. I'll have to test this shell script at some point just to make sure. I have had a handful of hard resets, where it has been difficult for me to know if that's related to my OC or this defect.
I'm guessing if the CPU is in fact faulty then the "kill-ryzen.sh" ought to work on stock clocks and voltages?
Since stability issues are still pretty rare for me, I might just keep the CPU until "Zen 2" is released and sell my current one. To my understanding, this problem doesn't affect Windows users so I could probably sell the CPU to someone else I may build a PC for. I'm hoping Zen 2 will be more energy-efficient and be able to OC higher. If the overall performance remained the same, I'd be fine with that.
I'm guessing if the CPU is in fact faulty then the "kill-ryzen.sh" ought to work on stock clocks and voltages?
Since stability issues are still pretty rare for me, I might just keep the CPU until "Zen 2" is released and sell my current one. To my understanding, this problem doesn't affect Windows users so I could probably sell the CPU to someone else I may build a PC for. I'm hoping Zen 2 will be more energy-efficient and be able to OC higher. If the overall performance remained the same, I'd be fine with that.
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