Actually my degree is in engineering, but not electrical.Can we assume that you are not an engineer?
So maybe I am missing something, because all the overclocking records belong to Raptor Lake. Before that, Alder Lake. Even before I7, it was Skylake (well, or actually Bulldozer). So, maybe you can explain to me why AMD processors don't scale with power as well as Intel's do? AMD sure tried this time around, with Ryzen 4, and did better, but ultimately the latest I7 iteration further improved the clock speeds Intel was able to reach.
So, how is it Intel always has higher clock speeds, both stock and in overclocking? Architecture could play a role, but when Intel consistently beats anything using TSMC, it's a bit of a pattern. It always seems to be the same pattern, AMD processors on TSMC use less power at most clock speeds, but as you add more, they don't scale to the same degree. And eventually fall flat on their faces, while Intel's hit overclocking records. It's also very well known that AMD processors don't overclock nearly as well as Intel's. So, maybe you can explain how this is so, but TSMC has a better performance node. Really, if it's something I'm not getting, I'd like to know, so do expatiate on it. And it's not like AMD doesn't like clock speed for their CPUs. Again, they sure tried this time around to match Intel, just they couldn't. Purely architecture? Maybe, but seems unlikely.