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An Intel November 2008 white paper [10] discusses "Turbo Boost" technology as a new feature incorporated into Nehalem-based processors released in the same month. [11]A similar feature called Intel Dynamic Acceleration (IDA) was first available with Core 2 Duo, which was based on the Santa Rosa platform and was released on May 10, 2007.
Intel Dynamic Acceleration (IDA) sometimes called Dynamic Acceleration Technology (DAT) is a technology created by Intel Corp. in certain multi-core Intel microprocessors.It increases the clock rate of a single core for every two cores above its base operating frequency if the other cores are idle.
AMD Turbo Core – Dynamic frequency scaling technology; Cool'n'Quiet – Power saving mode of modern processors by Advanced Micro Devices; CPU-Z – Freeware system profiling and monitoring application for Microsoft Windows and Android; Intel Turbo Boost – Overclocking technology by Intel
Intel Turbo Boost 2.0 [5] [6] [7] 32 KB data + 32 KB instruction L1 cache and 256 KB L2 cache per core [8] Shared L3 cache which includes the processor graphics ; 64-byte cache line size; New μOP cache, up to 1536-entry; Improved 3 integer ALU, 2 vector ALU and 2 AGU per core [9] [10] Two load/store operations per CPU cycle for each memory channel
Some Intel processors have provisions to reduce the Turbo Boost frequency limit when such instructions are being executed. This reduction happens even if the CPU hasn't reached its thermal and power consumption limits. On Skylake and its derivatives, the throttling is divided into three levels: [66] [67] L0 (100%): The normal turbo boost limit.
The dynamic power (switching power) dissipated by a chip is C·V 2 ·A·f, where C is the capacitance being switched per clock cycle, V is voltage, A is the Activity Factor [1] indicating the average number of switching events per clock cycle by the transistors in the chip (as a unitless quantity) and f is the clock frequency.
This generational list of Intel processors attempts to present all of ... Turbo boost max. 3.0 GPU Clock rate, max. ... 1.30 GHz, with Execute Disable bit; 360, 1.40 ...
Considering that AMD's Turbo Core technology is fundamentally similar to Intel's Turbo Boost, I propose changing the page title to something a brand-neutral name that can refer to both technologies. I'm not sure what would be a good title; maybe something like "Dynamic CPU speed adjustment"? Either that, or Turbo Core should get its own page.