![]() If my GPU is capable of running a title at 1200fps, it will idle 90% of the time and consume only ~60W regardless of the 600W power limit. >4K gsync monitors are typically limited to 120Hz. If the hotspot temp is 75 deg even with overclocking you're not limited by thermals: This completely misunderstands heat transfer. Specifically, you're limited by hotspots you can't see because they're between the on-die temperature sensors. Of course more power doesn't help if you're limited by thermals. > Oh and all these measurements you see tossed around are done with air coolers and stock voltages. But once you start laying off 20,000 here and 10,000 there, you get to the musical chairs point where some folks are going to be left without a chair for some time. I guess my main point was that, even with recent layoffs, feels like most of those folks wouldn't have had much difficulty getting snapped up by other companies, especially in engineering (not saying it wasn't disruptive to those involved). Oracle feels like the only one really comparable to me, but perhaps I'm just showing my personal bias that I'd really wish Oracle would lay off everyone and go under, but I digress. ![]() Zillow is a bit of a special case because of their complete f'up with flipping houses. Salesforce and Microsoft obviously aren't, but their numbers are also much, much smaller and the amounts are a really teeny percentage of their overall workforce. Similar windows are available for showing both current CPU usage ( Command-2) and CPU usage history ( Command-3).Yeah, understood it's a lagging indicator, but most of those US companies you mention (Peloton, Snap, Shopify, Carvana) are in the "unprofitable VC-funded camp". The GPU History window isn’t the only handy display available via Activity Monitor. The GPU usage window will remain always on top by default, but you can toggle that behavior by selecting Window > Keep CPU Windows on Top from the menu bar.You can click and drag on the small dot between each graph to change its size. This opens a new window called GPU History, which displays a utilization history for each GPU currently available to your Mac.With Activity Monitor open and selected as the active application, choose Window > GPU History from the menu bar at the top of the screen, or press the keyboard shortcut Command-4. ![]() You can find it in its default location (Applications > Utilities) or by searching for it with Spotlight.
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