From the sound of it, nothing, really. It says in the article the CPU is stable, it’s the APU that’s speeding up. It’s possible that some games that tie in-game events to when a sound completes might be affected (I have no examples), but otherwise the effects seem cosmetic.
It’s very possible. Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe the CPU and APU do a little acknowledgment handshake every time an audio program finishes. I’m willing to bet there a lot of instances of the CPU subroutine waiting on the APU, e.g. an animation waiting for a sound cue to finish can advance slightly faster.
From the sound of it, nothing, really. It says in the article the CPU is stable, it’s the APU that’s speeding up. It’s possible that some games that tie in-game events to when a sound completes might be affected (I have no examples), but otherwise the effects seem cosmetic.
It’s very possible. Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe the CPU and APU do a little acknowledgment handshake every time an audio program finishes. I’m willing to bet there a lot of instances of the CPU subroutine waiting on the APU, e.g. an animation waiting for a sound cue to finish can advance slightly faster.