![]() ![]() Turbo Boost Switcher will lower down the frequency 300Mhz below Low Power Mode does.Turbo Boost Switcher saves you 4Watts compared to new Low Power Mode. ![]() This was just a little fast test… and of course more time is needed, but the first results on my test Macbook Pro (characteristics on previous figure) seems to point that. Instead, it keeps the frecuency above the base clock value (in mine, 300Mhz above) so the power & battery saving and temperature reduction is still better if you use Turbo Boost Switcher than Low Power Mode from Apple.īest of all, you can use both! I tried Since that feature is a little obscure, and they might be performing other optimisations., it’s great that you can have both options to keep disabling turbo boost and get other improvements by Apple itself on their new low power mode option. I’ve been playing with the new low power mode provided by Apple in Monterey, and it does NOT disables Turbo Boost. All other features works fine the same that they do on current stable Big Sur version.Īnd there is MORE. That’s it… I’ve been testing the app with Monterey and works just fine from beta to final vresion! Hurray! As you can see on the image below, the app keeps disabling turbo boost with Monterey developer beta final!. Click over Details under Privacy & Security Enable Turbo Boost kernel extension and finally reboot. After that, remember to reboot! although macOS will ask you to do that. Something like the following screenshots. As you can see, now settings are shown with a left navigation sidebar, but you just need to click there over “Security and privacy” as always and, after that, click over “Details…” in order to enable the kernel extension from “Legacy Developer: rugarciap”. Here you’ve got a little screenshot taken just nowĪnd there is more… since Power Mode Switcher is working just fine too!įor those of you that need to approve the kernel extension again and/or installing for the first time on macOS Ventura, the process is the same, but Apple changed the user interface a little. That means the app is compatible with macOS 13 final version! Hooray! I’ll keep this post updated after each beta release until final version for compatibility tracking. ![]() I’ve just tried myself and wanted to share with all of you that Turbo Boost Switcher (both PRO and FREE versions) is working flawlessly on the just released macOS Ventura final! So hope you enjoy it! and please let me know what you think about this new version on comments below. Minor fixes and improvements, help update and so on.CPU Frequency Charts: Since retrieving CPU frequency (using powermetrics) is time and cpu consuming, data is only obtained when charting window is open, that’s why no value is shown (grey background) when charting is closed.Adjusted charts: Axes and values are now scaled proportionally.No data: When there is no data available a gray background layer is added.2 New Chart Modes: Now you can view also the CPU Load and Frequency average values.Revamped Charting!: (FREE and PRO): Charting needed some love since long ago, so put some work over them with this version:.As you can see in the following figure, enable it so Turbo Boost is automatically disabled when cpu load goes above the configured level, and goes on again below a certain load. New Auto Mode: CPU Load (PRO only): Yes! now you can set a CPU level as auto mode.macOS Ventura tested and ready to go! (FREE and PRO). ![]() This time all new features are requested by many of you since a lot of time! Here comes again a new version of Turbo Boost Switcher both FREE & PRO to celebrate incoming macOS Ventura version just released. ![]()
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