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refactor_mastertoday at 1:52 AM3 repliesview on HN

Still baffles the mind that Apple solved this issue some 20+ years ago, and others _still_ haven't. I remember being basically surrounded by jet engines running Word in school.

A few years ago in an old job I got a monster-specced Dell laptop, and it would still roar if I opened anything. I had to pull all the nerf tricks through the BIOS to at least keep it somewhat tolerable in low-load scenarios (i.e. most of the workday).


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wqaatwttoday at 6:40 AM

> Apple solved this issue some 20+ years ago

All the i7/i9 Macbook pros that I used back in the day were obnoxiously load. Even when not under particularly heavy load.

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AnthonyMousetoday at 7:36 AM

A fanless CPU needs more, lower-clocked cores to have the same multi-thread performance as an actively cooled CPU with fewer cores, and higher core count CPUs cost more. So you only get a fanless CPU if you either a) get a low multi-thread performance CPU or b) pay for a high-performance CPU and then get only medium performance out of it by running it fanless. Notice that even Apple's highest performance laptops have fans; fanless there isn't a thing.

But Apple's fanless machines do b) and then they just charge you the premium. There are a few fanless PC laptops that do the same thing, but most people don't want that, because they'd rather save a significant amount of money by getting the same performance out of a less expensive CPU with a fan.

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socalgal2today at 9:21 AM

I wish I lived in the reality. My 2014 MBP and 2019 MBP’s fans come on quick and loud

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