Windows 10 Is Adding an Ultimate Performance Mode For Pros (engadget.com) 151
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Engadget: When you're creating 3D models or otherwise running intensive tasks, you want to wring every ounce of performance out of your PC as possible. It's a good thing, then, that Microsoft has released a Windows 10 preview build in the Fast ring that includes a new Ultimate Performance mode if you're running Pro for Workstations. As the name implies, this is a step up for people for whom even the High Performance mode isn't enough -- it throws power management out the window to eliminate "micro-latencies" and boost raw speed. You can set it yourself, but PC makers will have the option of shipping systems with the feature turned on. Ultimate Performance isn't currently available for laptops or tablets, but Microsoft suggests that could change.
You can do this on older version too (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm gonna get myself an Alienware gamer laptop
Hot pink, with whale skin hubcaps
And all leather cow interior
And big brown baby seal eyes for head lights (yeah)
And I'm gonna drive in that baby in Ultimate Performance Mode
Gettin' 1 mile per gallon
Sucking down Quarter Pounder cheeseburgers from McDonald's
In the old fashioned non-biodegradable styrofoam containers
And when I'm done sucking down those greaseball burgers
I'm gonna wipe my mouth with the American flag
And then I'm
Meanwhile, for the plebs running Windows Home... (Score:3)
"Whatâ(TM)s new in Build 17101 & Build 17604
Input Improvements
Emoji design updates: Based on your feedback and to improve consistency, we've made adjustments to the design of some of our emoji.
Emoji search comes to more languages: Earlier in RS4, we updated the Emoji Panel to support browsing and picking emoji in many new locales. With today's build, we're bringing search support to more locales too! Now you can find an emoji by keyword in over 150 locales, including English (Great Britain), French
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I don't know that I've seen a product update in the past couple of months that doesn't have emoji updates.
LOLZ (Score:1)
As if performance problems on Windows were caused by micro-latencies...
Right, let's reclaim those 1-2% of performance, all while the antivirus is using half of the CPU cores to continuously scan the machine for viruses...
For performance, the best fix would be to simply use something else.
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You use AV on performance sensitive machines?
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Re:LOLZ (Score:5, Insightful)
2% isn't going to help much when the Meltdown patch just hit you for 50%.
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2% isn't going to help much when the Meltdown patch just hit you for 50%.
Exactly.
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Except the meltdown patch just hit even worst case users by a fraction of that. 2% for many workloads is a significant portion of the meltdown dramas.
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Have you considered leaving the servers unpatched? In order to actually be affected, you would need to allow people to run arbitrary code on the servers. So it comes down to what the the servers do. It's a threat to desktop PCs because that's an actual use case if you browser the web with Javascript enabled, but if the servers are just serving up content they should, in theory, be fine.
Of course, if you're doing something like hosting other people's websites or something like then you should probably pat
Why wasn't this an option before? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I want my computer to run slow. Please leave Ultimate Performance off, maybe insert some extra latency in a few places just because... This is hardly a new requirement. For the work I do, Windows has always been looked past because it couldn't get out of it's own way when running high-performance or near real time code. It will never do actual real time (Microsoft could make that, but it wouldn't be called Windows), but why has this "Ultra Extreme Actually Fast" mode been so impossible in the past?
I'm sorry; most CPU cycles are needed to check your Windows license validity every nanosecond.
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It's a bit like the help function. No matter what you are looking for, it always thinks you want to find out whether your copy of Windows is genuine.
Re:Why wasn't this an option before? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why wasn't this an option before? (Score:4, Informative)
I want my computer to run slow. Please leave Ultimate Performance off, maybe insert some extra latency in a few places just because...
Everyone is missing the point - they aren't offering a slow and fast version of Windows, they are offering "meltdown-patch/no-meltdown-patch" versions.
Re:Why wasn't this an option before? (Score:5, Informative)
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It doesn't know when they blocking even is going to finish. Sure, it'll get an interrupt from the DMA controller when DMA request is complete after instructing the SATA controller to fetch some data.
The problem is, changing the clock frequency takes time.
The system doesn't know how much processing the application is going to do before another blocking event happens either. It needs to make a compromise between keeping the current low speed clock and doing the work or increasing the the core voltage, waiting
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It was never impossible. You've always been able to tell Windows not to change the power state.
Re:Why wasn't this an option before? (Score:4)
You want a slow computer? I got a nice intel processor I can sell you.
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but why has this "Ultra Extreme Actually Fast" mode been so impossible in the past
It's not been impossible. It's just been completely irrelevant. Chalk up another feature I'll never turn on because a 1% boost in performance isn't worth the battery life hit.
As for being a realtime OS, you're right it never was, never will be and is not even remotely a design consideration. The same can be said about all desktop OSes except for those specifically designed for the purpose.
But Telemetry will still be turned on (Score:4, Insightful)
Still gathering a ton of data, which at the very least will impact network throughput.
Re:But Telemetry will still be turned on (Score:5, Informative)
Try stopping it - run a traffic monitor and take a look. It takes a ridiculous amount of effort to disable all the spyware. It's not just a matter of changing a few buried registry settings, you have to deliberately break services that can't be disabled and use an external firewall because the Windows internal one has hard-coded exceptions.
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Is there a place that lists all the ways that it phones home? Preferably in a format that can be inserted into an open source firewall?
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MS ain't stupid, it uses the same systems for updates that it uses for spying. If you want updates, you have to allow the spying.
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This is disgusting behaviour. That's the price we pay for Windows being the dominant desktop OS. If their marketshare was 50% or less they wouldn't dare to do that
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That's the price we pay for Windows being the dominant desktop OS. If their marketshare was 50% or less they wouldn't dare to do that
Microsoft was a dominant OS for a long time without doing any di.... without doing these dirty tricks. This is a direct consequence of Win10 becoming "free", though they still charge OEMs a few bucks for powerful machines. Since getting consumers to upgrade is no longer what brings in cash it's all about monetizing the users you have. It'll probably work too, Facebook is "free". Gmail is "free". Windows is "free". The vast majority seem to like it that way.
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Step #1: Backup important files
Step #2: Install {your favorite flavor of} Linux
Step #3: Restore important files
See? Wasn't that easy?
Re: But Telemetry will still be turned on (Score:2)
I don't have a favourite flavour of Linux - all of them suck in subtly different ways. I don't know what happened - around 2003 Linux looked almost ready for the desktop, but then it became really uncomfortable to use.
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Still beats using Linux, though. And I say that as someone who develops Linux applications for a living.
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No, but you can get aftermarket flames on Slashdot.
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Everybody you know is a problem. Neither of my Windows 10 machines have had update troubles for a year or more. One has never blue screened in over two years. The other, after installing an unusual compiler for an ARM project, it hated me for a day. My Surface Pro 3 fingerprint bug turned out to be a bad type cover.
Fix the people you know, buddy. You need better clients.
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"everybody I know" being such a more credible sample. Yeah. I quantified my sample.
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Sounds like you have Malware. I put 32 GB in my system back home and rarely see it get above 8 GB in intense games even.
cpu mining is dead and GPU is not so hot as well (Score:2)
cpu mining is dead and GPU is not so hot as well.
Double overhead gofasters (Score:2)
I want crappy performance mode (Score:5, Funny)
Ultra performance... meh...Wake me up when there is an ultra crappy performance mode.
I like my computers like I like my women, slow and full of viruses.
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Microsoft has been slowing down computers? (Score:3)
Here's how you could boost performance even more! (Score:4, Insightful)
Disable data collection and spying on us. Frees up CPU resources as well as network resources.
And I'd dare say that it would be easy to implement, no tweaking necessary. All it takes is flipping a few compiler switches...
Forced reboots make this meaningless. (Score:5, Insightful)
It doesn't matter how much performance they can wrangle when the OS still forces reboots for updates in the middle of compiling, encoding, rendering, etc.
You can't "just save" some things.
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Oh you're getting forced reboots during your code compiling? I'm genuinely impressed you can get any code to compile at all if you can't even change you settings to prevent the scenario you describe.
I can recommend a good book for programmers: "How to change windows settings for dummies".
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My corporate supplied computer at work doesn't have many settings to change.
And I have never associated Windows with performance. Unless it is "poor" performance. As a simple example, the software I develop at work takes about 4 hours to completely build and test on Linux. It takes about 60 hours to do the same on Windows. And that is after copying every single needed file to the local hard drive (while Linux gets almost everything from the network). By the time Linux is done, Windows is about half way
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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"ultimate performance: God is dead and you now sit upon the throne in this wasteland of pure and unadulterated windows. The seals have been unlocked and the runes aligned as you see once and for all the true blistering power of Minesweeper. Cortana is replaced with a cursed portrait of W.E.B. Du-Buois into which you whisper your darkest desires (and save your passwords.) The startup sound is the entire 16 hour watergate deposition. the shutdown sound is a sacrosanct quote of your last words before you die a
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This will be good for Teams (Score:1)
Does this mean Black Viper is out of a job? (Score:2)
Does this disable OneDrive? (Score:3)
Because OneDrive has replaced antivirus as the single biggest performance drain on my computer. I regularly find OD pegging one of my cores at 100% load.
What an idea! (Score:5, Funny)
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What a joke (Score:2)
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If Windows isn't already tuned to give you raw horse power and performance, then switch to Linux based OS.
As soon as Linux runs all the games and apps we know and love, it will be the end of Microsoft.
Windows officially goes to 11! (Score:2)
It's one faster.
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"Quit the Finder" (Score:2)
Option available on some ancient mac programs in the System 6-9 era. You can force quit the Finder (vague analogous to Windows Explorer, the standard built-in file browser) so that you can run those programs that need just a little bit more memory and processor time.
This reminds me of that.
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Not really processor time. MacOS back then didn't have a thread interrupts. Once your application's thread is running it keeps going until it gives back control to the OS or you hit the debug button.
Need "Ludicrous Speed" (Score:3)
Let me know when you support Ludicrous Speed! ;)
Or back to 7 (Score:1)
Engadget Article is junk (Score:2)
There are additions for people using everyday PCs. Like Samsung, Microsoft is moving toward more familiar emoji. It also helps you search for those emoji in more languages, and provides you more control over file system access for Universal Windows Platform apps. As a rule, though, this preview is aimed at pros who want to see how well a workstation can run when there's nothing holding it back.
Windows high performance (Score:2)
Wouldn't be necessary if (Score:3)
Microsoft would turn off or disable all the silly unnecessary bullshit running in the background.
Cortana, all the Telemetry crap, and probably a big chunk of all the running processes that are enabled by default.
Laptops (Score:2)
In case anybody's wondering why the mode is disabled for laptops, it's because quite a few literally *can't* run for extended periods of time at full-bore speed without overheating. For YEARS, companies like Toshiba were advertising specs based on CPU specs, but underclocking them behind the scenes to reduce heat. Most current laptops can (mostly) run at full-speed without crashing, but will gradually cook their electrolytic capacitors & other components to death if you insist.
Now, the big question is..
It's the '80s Turbo Button all over again (Score:2)
-o- (Score:1)
How about dealing with the basics first, like that ability to walk away from the computer with your multi-application state arranged as you see fit and return WITHOUT FINDING THAT ALL YOUR PREPARATION HAS BEEN LOST BECAUSE WINDOWS USES A DEAD-MAN SWITCH METAPHOR when asking for permission to reboot to install updates!
What the hell is wrong with you people?
Re: Every ounce of performance (Score:2)
Not really. For typical desktop use running apps that don't necessarily TRY to be optimized for multithreading, Windows generally "tries harder" to put multiple cores to good use ANYWAY.
The traditional Linux attitude has been, "if you want to take advantage of multiple cores, write your software properly." Windows just assumes (correctly) that most apps DON'T try, and does its best to at least multithread the *rest* of the system (including libraries). It doesn't always succeed, but it tends to get accident
Re: creimer spam alert! (Score:2)
Does the youtube auto subscribe button actually work? Youâ(TM)d think theyâ(TM)d be smart enough to check the relevant headers.
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You know things are bad when you're trolling yourself...