To understand this specific string, we first need to understand ACPI. Introduced in the late 1990s, ACPI is an open standard that allows an operating system to communicate with and manage the power usage of its hardware. Before ACPI, power management was largely the BIOS's responsibility. ACPI shifted that control to the OS, enabling features like putting individual devices to sleep when not in use or waking the system on a timer.
Officially, these processors are not supported by Windows 11. While it can be installed via "dirty upgrades," users often report performance issues or a lack of security feature optimization.
Set the to 5% and the Maximum processor state to 99% (dropping it to 99% disables Intel Turbo Boost, which can instantly stabilize a degrading or overheating CPU). acpi genuineintel---intel64-family-6-model-58
The specific "stepping" or design revision for Ivy Bridge chips. 🛠 Why You Are Seeing This Identifier
Model 58 signifies that your processor is built on the . This was a major technological leap for Intel when it launched in 2012: To understand this specific string, we first need
Most users encounter this string in or Event Viewer . If you see a yellow exclamation mark next to it, or if it appears in a "Blue Screen of Death" (BSOD) log, it usually points to one of three issues: 1. Missing Chipset Drivers
The power management and configuration standard that allows the OS to control hardware power states (C-states/P-states). Vendor ID String ACPI shifted that control to the OS, enabling
Confirms that the CPU natively supports the 64-bit extension (x86-64 / AMD64 computing architecture). CPU Family Designator