Re: PROBLEM: Celeron Core

From: Robert Hancock
Date: Sun Jan 20 2008 - 14:24:56 EST


Matt Mackall wrote:
Your usage of "overall power" here is wrong. Power is an instantaneous
quantity (1/s) like velocity, and you are comparing it to energy which
is not an instaneous quantity, more like distance.

If we throttle the velocity of a car from 100km/h to 50km/h, it'll
obviously take longer for it travel a given distance. Now what will it
mean when we ask about its "overall velocity" when it reaches its
destination? We surely don't mean the distance travelled - that's not a
velocity! We can perhaps talk about its average velocity, which will
obviously be smaller.

You are right.. it should be that overall energy usage is higher with clock throttling.


Real CPU clock throttling schemes like SpeedStep, PowerNow, etc. actually do increase performance per watt when they kick in.

That may be true. But the statement "throttling does not reduce power
usage" remains false. And the statement "throttling reduces heat
production but not power usage" remains physically impossible.

It reduces the rate of power usage (watts), however it will likely not decreate or even increase the energy usage (i.e. watt-hours) of any given computational task.


It might be true that "throttling increases energy usage per unit of
computation relative to no power saving measures at all", but that is
not incompatible with "throttling lets you run your laptop on battery
longer than no power saving measures at all", which is often what people
care about.

Voltage/frequency reduction is obviously a much better solution if it's
available as reducing voltage reduces power usage quadratically rather
than linearly. But beyond the quadratic/linear thing, the concept is the
same: use less power and your battery lasts longer.

Clock throttling is not likely to save your battery, unless you have tasks that are running at 100% CPU for an unlimited time or something, and you force your CPU to throttle. Normally most people have tasks that run and then the CPU idles - loading an email, displaying a web page, etc. Clock throttling will just make these tasks utilize the CPU for a longer time proportional to the amount clock throttling and therefore negate any gains in battery usage.
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