Intel has announced the deployment of microcode update 0x12B aimed at resolving the Vmin offset instability observed in its 13th and 14th series desktop processors, as they have now identified the ...
Microcode 0x12B “addresses elevated voltage requests by the processor during idle and/or light activity periods.” Microcode 0x12B “addresses elevated voltage requests by the processor during idle ...
Intel has spent most of 2024 investigating and trying to fix a problems that was causing crashes and instability for owners of its high-end 13th- and 14th-generation Core desktop processors. In April, ...
Intel's Raptor Lake CPUs have been exhibiting instability for quite some time now, and the company has begun to take steps to address it this year. Several updates have been announced in the past few ...
The big picture: Intel has finally identified all the underlying culprits behind the instability issues plaguing its 13th- and 14th-gen processors. While the company previously recognized the root ...
Intel has announced it had discovered the root cause of the instability afflicting some Raptor Lake CPUs. The company also announced it would be releasing a new microcode update to mitigate this flaw, ...
Intel identifies excessive voltage as a main cause. Intel's 13th and 14th Gen desktop processors have been experiencing stability issues, which have been widely discussed online. In response to these ...
Intel's 13th generation Core processor 'Raptor Lake' and 14th generation Core processor 'Raptor Lake Refresh' have a flaw that causes applications to crash or terminate, and Intel has acknowledged its ...
This power problem is what was causing the computers to crash. Intel is working hard to fix this. They have created a software update called a microcode patch. This patch will tell the processors to ...
CPU manufacturers must address issues that arise with processors already on the market, especially the errors that are discovered over time. To handle this, Intel has released a new version of ...
Intel is quite known for playing around and pointing fingers. Intel will never admit it. They will always play around and dodge any kind of confrontation about it, and OEM's will never try to address ...