DosFreak wrote on 2024-07-29, 19:05:
Wow.
If that article is accurate (and I see no obvious reason to doubt it), Intel's response gives absolutely no confidence in them. I don't get the impression that they have a cohesive and thought out strategy in terms of damage control here at all.
I am reading between the lines here, but my guess would be that while they probably understand the mechanism for the issue and how to mitigate it proactively
a) they just don't have an accurate model of how much irreversible damage has already been done nor how much will still be done before the mitigation strategy is put into place nor how many CPUs will actually end up failing
b) based on a), they don't want to overcommit themselves or overreact unnecessarily (hope of minimizing costs)
c) pure conjecture on my part, but the mitigation might be effective in preventing or slowing down degradation in still relatively "healthy" chips, but it may already be too late for some still working ones. It is also possible that the mitigation only slows down the failure process to a point where Intel hopes that most chips will live through their commercially useful lifespan (Intel may not have clarity on even this).
IMHO, if Intel was actually confident in their strategy and its effectiveness, they wouldn't be giving the impression of playing it by the ear as much and would be more assertive, committed and transparent. Ironically, all this ambiguity would be putting me off buying any gen 13 or 14 CPU of theirs if I was in the market for a CPU, even if the mitigation came out today.
I will go one step further in saying that Intel are essentially implying that any current use (before the still unreleased mitigation) of those chips that are currently still working runs the risk of irreversibly damaging them. IMHO, that implied positioning is not making Intel look good at all.