Conversation

I'm not sure why Intel thinks that anyone wants to see this Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0 configuration panel every time they boot up Windows on a Broadwell-E CPU. I even uninstalled it and it just reinstalled itself. Going to nuke whatever tasks it registers this time...
Replying to
The entire thing is completely useless for me. I have all the cores @ 4.4GHz under load. I don't have the usual turbo ratio providing higher clock rates when fewer cores are used, and this isn't even for optimizing that. It's for optimizing based on a varying per-core multiplier.
1
2
Even if someone bought an X series CPU and left it with the default setup, I'm struggling to understand why they would ever want to manually configure priority applications for this specific optimization, let alone seeing the configuration panel for doing that after every boot...
1
1
Google "Intel Turbo Boost Max Technology 3.0" and you'll find many other people annoyed be this along with a local privilege escalation vulnerability tied to the driver. Got to love software that gets automatically installed and apparently cannot be removed through normal means.
3