- Joined
- Jun 22, 2021
- Messages
- 71 (0.07/day)
- Location
- CZ
Processor | Ryzen 7 5800X |
---|---|
Motherboard | B550 Aorus Elite v2 |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer II 240 ARGB w/ Conductonaut |
Memory | 4x8 GB HyperX Fury 3600MHz |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 3080 Ti Gaming X Trio |
Storage | 970 EVO 1TB, 970 EVO Plus 2TB |
Display(s) | Omen 32q |
Case | SilentiumPC Regnum RG6V EVO TG ARGB |
Audio Device(s) | Topping D10s+L30, Emu Teak, AH-D5200&D2000, HD660S2, Focal Elegia, SR325x, 7Hz Zero:2, MDR-1AM2, etc |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850 |
Mouse | Xtrfy M4 |
Keyboard | Alloy Origins 60 |
Software | Win11 |
Benchmark Scores | very high of course |
Hi!
Does anyone know if the behavior of Windows 11 with regards to Spectre & Meltdown is the same as on Windows 10? Given 11 has a re-worked scheduler and whatnot, I expect there to be differences.
The main things I am interested in are:
1 - Is there a way to disable the mitigations as there was on Win 10 (as described here)?
2 - Does the method linked above still work as it did on Win 10?
3 - If there is a way to disable those, are there performance benefits?
I would be glad if we could avoid discussions like "but you should not be disabling the protection because then your PC will be vulnerable bla bla". I just want better performance on my laptop and NAS, both Intel based, and don't really consider those "vulnerabilities" to be of any actual danger to a normal user.
Does anyone know if the behavior of Windows 11 with regards to Spectre & Meltdown is the same as on Windows 10? Given 11 has a re-worked scheduler and whatnot, I expect there to be differences.
The main things I am interested in are:
1 - Is there a way to disable the mitigations as there was on Win 10 (as described here)?
2 - Does the method linked above still work as it did on Win 10?
3 - If there is a way to disable those, are there performance benefits?
I would be glad if we could avoid discussions like "but you should not be disabling the protection because then your PC will be vulnerable bla bla". I just want better performance on my laptop and NAS, both Intel based, and don't really consider those "vulnerabilities" to be of any actual danger to a normal user.