Tag Archives: stability

Tester Reveals Only 5 out of 10 Core i9-13900K & 2 out of 10 Core i9-14900K CPUs Stable In Auto Profile, Intel & Board Partners Yet To Determine Cause of Stability Issues – Wccftech

  1. Tester Reveals Only 5 out of 10 Core i9-13900K & 2 out of 10 Core i9-14900K CPUs Stable In Auto Profile, Intel & Board Partners Yet To Determine Cause of Stability Issues Wccftech
  2. Intel issues statement about CPU crashes, blames motherboard makers — BIOSes disable thermal and power protection, causing issues Tom’s Hardware
  3. In Light of Stability Concerns, Intel Issues Request to Motherboards Vendors to Actually Follow Stock Power Settings AnandTech
  4. Intel Baseline Profile Yields Odd Power/Performance On Linux Phoronix
  5. Intel issues new guidelines to motherboard partners for crashing i9s TechRadar

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Intel issues its first statement in response to 13/14th Gen Core i9 CPU stability issues – VideoCardz.com

  1. Intel issues its first statement in response to 13/14th Gen Core i9 CPU stability issues VideoCardz.com
  2. Intel issues statement about CPU crashes, blames motherboard makers — BIOSes disable thermal and power protection, causing issues Tom’s Hardware
  3. Gigabyte’s heavy-handed fix for Intel Core i9 CPU instability drops performance to Core i7 levels in some cases – but don’t panic yet TechRadar
  4. “Intel Baseline Profile” tested with Core i9-14900K: 8-9% performance loss compared to ASUS ‘auto’ settings VideoCardz.com
  5. Some Intel CPUs lost 9% of their performance almost overnight Digital Trends

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Intel Blames Motherboard & System Manufacturers For 14th & 13th Gen CPU Stability Issues – Wccftech

  1. Intel Blames Motherboard & System Manufacturers For 14th & 13th Gen CPU Stability Issues Wccftech
  2. Intel issues statement about CPU crashes, blames motherboard makers — BIOSes disable thermal and power protection, causing issues Tom’s Hardware
  3. Gigabyte’s heavy-handed fix for Intel Core i9 CPU instability drops performance to Core i7 levels in some cases – but don’t panic yet TechRadar
  4. “Intel Baseline Profile” tested with Core i9-14900K: 8-9% performance loss compared to ASUS ‘auto’ settings VideoCardz.com
  5. Some Intel CPUs lost 9% of their performance almost overnight Digital Trends

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NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues – VideoCardz.com

  1. NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues VideoCardz.com
  2. Nvidia blames Intel for GPU VRAM errors, tells GeForce gamers experiencing 13th or 14th Gen CPU instability to contact Intel support Tom’s Hardware
  3. Intel investigating games crashing on 13th and 14th Gen Core i9 processors The Verge
  4. Nvidia issues important message to GeForce GPU and Intel CPU owners PCGamesN
  5. Intel’s 13th & 14th Gen CPU “Gaming Stability” Is Being Investigated As 10+ Chips Being Returned In Korea Each Day Wccftech

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After a chaotic launch, Star Wars: Battlefront Classic Collection devs admit “critical errors” were made as it works to address multiplayer issues and “increase network stability” – Gamesradar

  1. After a chaotic launch, Star Wars: Battlefront Classic Collection devs admit “critical errors” were made as it works to address multiplayer issues and “increase network stability” Gamesradar
  2. We Need Another Star Wars Battlefront Reboot IGN
  3. Aspyr makes Star Wars: Battlefront Classic Collection statement after crashing to ‘Overwhelmingly Negative’ reviews, says it’s working on it, doesn’t apologise or explain why it needs 62.87GB of your disc space PC Gamer
  4. ‘Battlefront Classic Collection’ Multiplayer Review: It’s More Than Just Server Issues Star Wars News Net
  5. Star Wars Battlefront collection blowback gets worse as players discover it demands over 8x more storage than the original games combined Gamesradar

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Bitcoin price stability creates lucrative setups in TON, XMR, MNT and QNT – Cointelegraph

  1. Bitcoin price stability creates lucrative setups in TON, XMR, MNT and QNT Cointelegraph
  2. Worst of Recent Bitcoin (BTC) Correction Largely Behind Us, Says Banking Giant JPMorgan: Report The Daily Hodl
  3. Bitcoin to hit $50,000 by the end of 2023 if this pattern is repeated Finbold – Finance in Bold
  4. BTC Must Hold this Level, Otherwise $25K Breakdown is Likely (Bitcoin Price Analysis) CryptoPotato
  5. Trader Who Rode 2023 Crypto Rally Warns of Fake Bitcoin Breakout if ETF Gets Approved – Here’s His Outlook The Daily Hodl
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Cole Sprouse Opened Up About Being Forced Into Child Acting For A Life Of “Financial Stability” And Admitted He “Definitely” Has Some Resentment Towards His Parents – BuzzFeed News

  1. Cole Sprouse Opened Up About Being Forced Into Child Acting For A Life Of “Financial Stability” And Admitted He “Definitely” Has Some Resentment Towards His Parents BuzzFeed News
  2. Why Cole Sprouse Found Lili Reinhart Breakup ‘Really Hard’ Entertainment Tonight
  3. Former Disney child star Cole Sprouse lost his virginity at 14 while on family vacation: ‘So cringey’ Yahoo News
  4. Cole Sprouse opens up about his estranged mother; relationships with girlfriends on Alex Cooper’s Call he timesofindia.com
  5. Cole Sprouse mocked for ‘smoking’ during ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast appearance indy100
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Live news: UK chancellor Jeremy Hunt prioritises stability over tax cuts

Hasbro said it would stay on track to make $250mn-$300mn in annual cost savings © Ray Stubblebine/Reuters

Hasbro said it would cut 1,000 jobs and announced the departure of its chief operating officer as the US toymaker revealed preliminary results for the fourth-quarter that were worse than previously forecast.

The job cuts, representing about 15 per cent of its global workforce, “are necessary to return our business to a competitive, industry-leading position”, chief executive Chris Cocks said in a statement on Thursday afternoon.

Hasbro said they would help keep the company on track to achieve its goal, as part of a plan announced last October, of $250mn to $300mn in annual cost savings by the end of 2025.

The company, which makes Monopoly board games and Transformers toys, said chief operating officer Eric Nyman would depart as a result of the organisational and commercial changes. The company said in its most recent annual report it employed 6,640 people worldwide.

In preliminary results released on Thursday, Hasbro said revenue in 2022 was about $5.86bn, down 9 per cent from a year ago, or a 6 per cent drop in constant currency terms. That was worse than its October forecast, when it cut its full-year outlook, and analysts’ expectations for more than $6.1bn.

The company also had a weak holiday season, which is typically a crucial sales time for toymakers and retailers. Hasbro’s revenue in the three months ended December 26 of $1.68bn, was down 17 per cent from a year earlier and below Wall Street’s median forecast for $1.92bn.

Hasbro shares fell more than 7 per cent in after-hours trading in New York on Thursday. At the end of the regular session, its shares were up 4.5 per cent since the start of 2023, but have shed about 29 per cent over the past 12 months.

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Kawakami: John Lynch on Adam Peters, the most surprising thing about Brock Purdy and the 49ers’ stability

It probably took less than an hour for John Lynch to get asked the question inside 49ers headquarters. Maybe less than 10 minutes. News broke that assistant general manager Adam Peters was declining interview requests for two open general-manager positions and choosing to stay with the 49ers.

And then …

“I just had somebody come in and say, ‘Hey, man, is there something I should know?’” John Lynch said, chuckling during a phone interview on Wednesday. “I said, ‘What do you mean?’ He said, ‘I’m getting all these calls that, you know, people are inferring that you’re leaving.’ I was, like, ‘No, I’m good.’”

No, Lynch isn’t ready to go anywhere, just like Peters isn’t ready to go anywhere. First, the 49ers’ top two football executives are both focused on this playoff run, which starts Saturday against the Seahawks. And second, while Peters is the odds-on top choice to eventually move into the 49ers’ GM spot should Lynch opt to go to television or elsewhere, it’s not happening right now or likely this offseason.

Lynch said that Peters’ decision to opt out of interviews with the Titans and Cardinals — initially reported by the NFL Network — was his personal choice, which Lynch both appreciates and understands.

“I think Adam just came in and said, ‘Look, I respect both those places, but I’m very happy here,’” Lynch said. “I think that’s a great thing. You know, Adam’s from here (Cupertino) and is a big part of what we’ve done. He’s been big for me. At the same time, I’m a friend. I said, ‘Pete, maybe you should at least talk to these people.’ But he was convicted that he was good here. And his family’s happy. So I like that, and I think, yes, we have a place where people want to be.

“We’re focused on this week, but I think there’s a good feeling that we’re going to be a good team and organization for a long time to come and people want to be a part of that.”

Lynch, of course, was heavily pursued by Amazon Prime last offseason and will probably always get mega-money feelers from the networks. He admitted in November that he came close to taking the Amazon job, reportedly worth $15 million a year, but decided he couldn’t leave the 49ers with “unfinished business.” So if the 49ers win the Super Bowl this February, Lynch might be more likely to seriously listen to a great offer. But even then, he sounds more than prepared to stay.

There’s a lot of stability permeating this franchise, even after a fairly tumultuous season in which the 49ers had to play three quarterbacks and probably ended up with the best fit of them all — rookie Brock Purdy — heading into the playoffs and beyond. Lynch and Kyle Shanahan also made the big midseason trade for Christian McCaffrey, who has looked like he’s been here forever basically from the moment he showed up. They have the No. 1 defense in the league, filled with stars.

The 49ers might win the Super Bowl this season. They might not. But six seasons into the Shanahan/Lynch era, they’ve never seemed so perfectly set up to push this further and higher. And together. Why wouldn’t Peters want to hang around through this potential 49ers boom time?

That was as good a launching point as any for my scheduled check-in with Lynch on Wednesday, just after the 49ers practiced in the wind, rain and whatever else was dumping down outside Levi’s Stadium — just like is forecast for Saturday afternoon.

Here are some of the other highlights from our conversation …

How did the practice go in all that rain?

It was good ’cause it seems like we’re going to be playing in it on Saturday.

Do you think your team is well suited for this kind of weather in a do-or-die game?

I think we’re set up to be (a good rain team). We’re fairly complete. We do a lot of different things well. We stop the run, we run the ball well. Those are typically the things (that are important in weather). Brock, obviously (didn’t play in extreme weather) growing up in Arizona, but at Iowa State he handled a lot of bad weather. So I think he’s equipped to do it.

You’ve gone through three QBs and all that this season, but it feels like you and Kyle have stuck to pretty much the same roster-building principles. What do you think this season is telling us about your process?

The thing I think I’m probably most proud of, because we’ve spent some money since we’ve been here — part of why it was a good job to take (was) because they hadn’t (spent a lot of money) before we got here (in February 2017), so you want to hear those things, that they’re committed to doing it. We’ve been fairly aggressive. But at some point, you’ve got to come to balance. And I think last (offseason) was one of those years for us.

Having said that, we still went out, we probably knew we had one significant move, and for us, it was a couple things: re-signing Deebo (Samuel) and then Charvarius Ward in terms of free agency. Really happy. We were all aligned on finding a top-flight corner. And then zeroing in that Charvarius was the guy. He’s been incredible for us. Really just love everything from his mentality to his abilities.

But then after that, we had some things we wanted to do, but we had to be creative and find players at a good value. Some of these guys, Ray-Ray (McCloud), Oren Burks, George Odum, these guys have been really integral.

We placed on emphasis on special teams, but one thing that Kyle and I have always agreed on, we don’t want just a guy (who only plays special teams). (Bill) Belichick will do that, and it’s served him well, but we just don’t want guys that are only special-teams players. We want guys who can contribute on offense and defense. And I think we’ve seen that from Ray-Ray certainly; Oren’s filled in at linebacker in limited snaps, but he’s played really well when he has. Ray-Ray’s return ability … I feel like he’s just getting going. He’s about to pop one. And George Odum, I think, has been dominant. I think he should be an All-Pro special-teams player the way he’s been playing, especially of late. I’m really proud of our staff for those moves.

Of course, so much focus is on Purdy, a rookie QB playing at this level. But he was a seventh-round pick, last pick of the entire draft. How close did you come to not taking him?

We came in with kind of a stated goal that, hey, late somewhere in the draft, let’s take a quarterback that we really believe in. Like we do with the later parts of the draft, in the month before, I’ve told this story, Steve Slowik, who’s now a pro scout and brother of Bobby Slowik, our pass-game coordinator, was the area scout. So his reports were consistently more so about the person than the player. He’s talking to (Iowa State coach) Matt Campbell. And Matt Campbell was, “This guy changed the program. Just listen to me, you’re going to be getting a special player.”

We had some high grades on him. Probably higher his junior year than his senior. But the process we usually do, for the later half of the draft, we’ll hand over a bucket of guys (to position coaches). (QB coach Brian) Griese and (assistant QB coach) Klay Kubiak, we had a bucket of probably about eight guys, and they really, early on in the process, became fans of Brock. … And they really went in-depth, Zoom meetings and all that, became more and more convicted on Brock. Once we had kind of knocked off our checklist of everything we thought we needed, “OK, we need a couple more corners …” Once we had done that and Brock was still there, we wanted him as a free agent. We didn’t know whether he’d last. Once we got to that last pick and had checked off all the other boxes, it was, “Let’s just go ahead and take our quarterback. We like this kid. We’re convicted on him, let’s not leave it to chance.”

And I’ve never asked Brock, I kept telling myself I’m going to do it, but I don’t want to mess with his head right now: “Would you have come as a free agent?” I hope he would’ve. (Laughs.)

I think the thing that’s probably surprised us all, he’s a better athlete than any of us anticipated. You saw him run around a little at Iowa State, but you never know how that’s going to translate. But he’s got some athleticism to him. Last week, he escaped early in the game and gets the edge on a defensive lineman, ends up getting 12-13 yards. I mean, those are big deals when you’re moving the chains. He’s done it repeatedly.

Things can always change and have frequently this season at that position, but Purdy’s performance right now looks like Jimmy Garoppolo’s first big splash in 2017, and Garoppolo was immediately your starting QB into 2018. Is Purdy your starter next season?

I know it’s my job, but I’ve really been focused on, like, let’s not even go there. Let’s ride this thing out. I’m going to need Kyle’s participation. I’ve got my own thoughts. But I’ve really tried to be focused on, let’s just keep taking this as it comes. We’ll figure it out.

We’re left with a really good situation with a guy we moved a lot for to get in (2021 first-round pick) Trey (Lance). We still love his skills. And Brock’s been more than we ever could’ve asked for. We liked him a lot, but I’ve been telling people, “Yeah, we did wait ’til the last pick of the draft.” (Laughs.)

The one thing I will say, the athleticism, putting him in a game, that has surprised us. But from Day 1, he was functioning at a high level out here. OTAs, all that. Everybody’s looking at each other, “Wow, this guy’s got some courage.” He threw into small windows, he was efficient. He’s performed from the start, but you never know until you throw him in there. Same can be said now we’re going to playoff football. How’s he going to respond? But he’s checked every box thus far, so I wouldn’t anticipate seeing anything different.

Plus having a seventh-round contract, plus Lance’s rookie contract as your two QBs sure will help your salary cap next season.

And the way we’re set up, we’ve got a lot of high-paid guys (at other positions). What’s one way you do that? You’re not paying your quarterback what some people are paying their quarterback. There was some strategy certainly when we were thinking about shifting over to Trey and all that. That’s how we could keep this team together. That is one potential way. Who knows where we’ll go? I think we have a good situation, though.

GO DEEPER

Here’s why the 49ers have a championship profile

(Photo: Jeff Bottari / Getty Images)



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Bank of England Further Expands Bond-Market Rescue to Restore U.K.’s Financial Stability

LONDON—The Bank of England extended support targeted at pension funds for the second day in a row, the latest attempt to contain a bond-market selloff that has threatened U.K. financial stability.

The central bank on Tuesday said it would add inflation-linked government bonds to its program of long-dated bond purchases, after an attempt on Monday to help pension funds failed to calm markets.

“Dysfunction in this market, and the prospect of self-reinforcing ‘fire sale’ dynamics pose a material risk to U.K. financial stability,” the BOE said.

The yield on a 30-year U.K. inflation-linked bond has soared above 1.5% this week, up from 0.851% on Oct. 7, according to

Tradeweb.

Just weeks ago, the yield on the gilt, as U.K. government bonds are known, was negative. Because yields rise as prices fall, the effect has been punishing losses for bond investors.

Turmoil in the U.K. bond market created a feedback loop that left investors like pension funds short on cash and rippled out into other markets. WSJ’s Chelsey Dulaney explains the type of investment at the heart of the crisis. Illustration: Ryan Trefes

On Tuesday, after the BOE expanded the purchases, the yield on inflation-linked gilts held mostly steady but at the new, elevated levels. The central bank said it bought roughly £2 billion, equivalent to about $2.21 billion, in inflation-linked gilts, out of a £5 billion daily capacity.

The bank’s bond purchases, however, are meant to run out on Friday. The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, a trade body that represents the pension industry, urged the central bank on Tuesday to extend its purchases until the end of the month.

The near-daily expansion of the Bank of England’s rescue plan highlighted the challenges facing central banks in stamping out problems fueled by a once-in-a-generation increase in inflation and interest rates. It also raised questions about whether the BOE was providing the right medicine to address the problem.

The turmoil sparked fresh demands on Monday for pension funds to come up with cash to shore up LDIs, or liability-driven investments, derivative-based strategies that were meant to help match the money they owe to retirees over the long term.

LDIs were at the root of the bond selloff that prompted the BOE’s original intervention. Pension plans in late September saw a wave of margin calls after Prime Minister

Liz Truss’s

government announced large, debt-funded tax cuts that fueled an unprecedented bond-market selloff.

The BOE launched its original bond-purchase program on Sept. 28, but it only restored calm for a couple of days before selling resumed. An expansion of the program on Monday backfired, with yields again soaring higher.

The selloff on Monday was “very reminiscent of two weeks ago,” said

Simeon Willis,

chief investment officer of XPS, a company that advises pension plans.

LDI strategies use leveraged financial derivatives tied to interest rates to amplify returns. The outsize moves in U.K. bond markets last month led to huge collateral calls on pensions to back up the leveraged investments. The pension funds have sold other assets, including government and corporate bonds, to meet those calls, adding to pressure on yields to rise and creating a spiral effect on markets.

Pensions are typically big holders of inflation-linked government bonds, which help protect the plans from both inflation and interest-rate changes. But these weren’t eligible in the BOE’s bond-buying program until Tuesday.

The U.K. helped pioneer bonds with payouts linked to inflation, sometimes referred to as linkers, in the 1980s. Linkers were originally sold exclusively to pensions, but the U.K. opened them to other investors over the years.

Pensions remain a dominant force in the market because the bonds offer long-term protection against both inflation and interest-rate changes. Their outsize role left the market vulnerable to shifts in pension-fund demand like that seen in recent weeks.

Adam Skerry, a fund manager at Abrdn with a focus on inflation-linked government bonds, said his firm has struggled to trade those assets in recent days.

“We were trying to sell some bonds this morning, and it was virtually impossible to do that,” he said. “The LDI issue that’s facing the market, the fact that the market is moving to the degree that it did, particularly yesterday, suggests that there’s still an awful lot [of selling] there.”

Pensions have also appeared hesitant to sell their bonds to the BOE, reflecting a mismatch in what the central bank is offering and what the market needs.

“The way that the bank has structured this intervention is they can only buy assets if people put offers into them, but nobody is putting offers in,” said Craig Inches, head of rates and cash at Royal London Asset Management. He said the pension funds would rather sell their riskier assets, including corporate bonds or property.

Mr. Willis of XPS said many pensions want to hold on to their government bonds because it helps protect pensions against changes in interest rates, which impact the way their liabilities are valued.

“If they sell gilts now, they’re doing it in the likelihood that they’ll need to buy them back in the future at some point and they might be more expensive, and that’s unhelpful,” he said.

Also plaguing the program: Pension funds are traditionally slow-moving organizations that make decisions with multidecade horizons. The market turmoil has hurtled them into the warp-speed-style moves usually reserved for traders at swashbuckling hedge funds.

To make decisions about the sale of assets, industry players describe a game of telephone playing out among trustees, investment advisers, fund managers and banks. Pension funds spread their assets among multiple managers, which are in turn held by separate custodian banks. Calling everyone for the necessary signoffs is creating a lengthy and involved process.

To give themselves more time, pension funds are pushing the BOE to extend the bond-buying program at least to the end of the month. That is when the U.K.’s Treasury chief,

Kwasi Kwarteng,

is expected to lay out the government’s borrowing plans for the coming year.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies, a nonpartisan think tank that focuses on the budget, warned Tuesday that borrowing is likely to hit £200 billion in the financial year ending March, the third highest for a fiscal year since World War II and £100 billion higher than planned in March of this year. Increased borrowing increases the supply of bonds and generally causes bond yields to rise.

Mr. Kwarteng on Tuesday declared his confidence in BOE Gov. Andrew Bailey as he faced questions from lawmakers for the first time in his new job.

“I speak to the governor very frequently and he is someone who is absolutely independent and is managing what is a global situation very effectively,” he said.

Write to Chelsey Dulaney at Chelsey.Dulaney@wsj.com, Anna Hirtenstein at anna.hirtenstein@wsj.com and Paul Hannon at paul.hannon@wsj.com

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