Are Intel's i9-13900k's and -14900k's Crashing at a Higher Rate?
"Intel's problems with unstable 13th-gen and 14th-gen high-end CPUs appear to run deeper than we thought," writes TechRadar, "and a new YouTube video diving into these gremlins will do little to calm any fears that buyers of Raptor Lake Core i9 processors (and its subsequent refresh) have." Level1Techs is the YouTuber in question, who has explored several avenues in an effort to make more sense of the crashing issues with these Intel processors that are affecting some PC gamers and making their lives a misery - more so in some cases than others. Data taken from game developer crash logs - from two different games - clearly indicates a high prevalence of crashes with the mentioned more recent Intel Core i9 chips (13900K and 14900K). In fact, for one particular type of error (decompression, a commonly performed operation in games), there was a total of 1,584 that occurred in the databases Level1Techs sifted through, and an alarming 1,431 of those happened with a 13900K or 14900K. Yes - that's 90% of those decompression errors hitting just two specific CPUs. As for other processors, the third most prevalent was an old Intel Core i7 9750H (Coffee Lake laptop CPU) - which had a grand total of 11 instances. All AMD processors in total had just 4 occurrences of decompression errors in these game databases. "In case you were thinking that AMD chips might be really underrepresented here, hence that very low figure, well, they're not - 30% of the CPUs in the database were from Team Red..." "The YouTuber also brings up another point here: namely that data centers are noticing these issues with Core i9s." More details at Digital Trends... And long-time Slashdot reader UnknowingFool wrote a summary of the video's claims here.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.