Nainstalovat Steam
přihlásit se
|
jazyk
简体中文 (Zjednodušená čínština)
繁體中文 (Tradiční čínština)
日本語 (Japonština)
한국어 (Korejština)
ไทย (Thajština)
български (Bulharština)
Dansk (Dánština)
Deutsch (Němčina)
English (Angličtina)
Español-España (Evropská španělština)
Español-Latinoamérica (Latin. španělština)
Ελληνικά (Řečtina)
Français (Francouzština)
Italiano (Italština)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonéština)
Magyar (Maďarština)
Nederlands (Nizozemština)
Norsk (Norština)
Polski (Polština)
Português (Evropská portugalština)
Português-Brasil (Brazilská portugalština)
Română (Rumunština)
Русский (Ruština)
Suomi (Finština)
Svenska (Švédština)
Türkçe (Turečtina)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamština)
Українська (Ukrajinština)
Nahlásit problém s překladem



If anything, you may be losing more benefits by still being on Windows 10 for some reason on a 12th+ generation architecture, because Windows 11's scheduler does better with the hybrid architecture of those CPUs.
Some have reported 100MHz less on CPU with newer BIOS. What you want to do for CPU is enable 'Enhanced Multi-Core Performance' or 'Sync All Cores' so all 8 P-cores will hit 5GHz, not just 1, especially if only one is turboing to 4.9 max. Disable the E-cores.
12th gen is perfectly fine and bios patches will not limit them since the 12th gen cpus do not have the defect
Get a non updatable slimmed down Win10 ISO with spyware and bloat removed. And OC your CPU to 5.0GHz p-core, 4.0 GHz e-core and 4.2 ring (most 12700k should achieve this easily). That will give you the biggest performance boost.
Can't say I notice any difference, though I never stayed on Win11 that long.
No that's where BIOS updates come into play. Your Chipset Driver has nothing to do with that.