HBRU
Regular
Yes but this works on a Windows OS that is designed to work with different HW, different clock and such to give out steady results (more or less, pc gamers are used to have different fps and such frome theyr games). It's the first time this happen into the Console world and also with an OS that is not known to be so much flexible. So the silicon variability is abstracted trough a model that leads to predicted and predictable response.... and that to a degree (also into a long period... years of console life) that I find quite worrying. I mean: all thoose sensors that measure calc activity and lead to the modelled variability in frequency and voltage for how long are reliable ? I find this system too complicated... i trust more in simpler systems. I would never have built into my car such a system....Nvidia or Intel don't use the adaptive clocking system like AMD uses since around 2013 starting with steam roller. It's a very common technique for PC gamers if they especially use Ryzen CPUs.
IIRC, Voltage for ideal processors wouldn't fluctuate when activity occurs. However, due to ohmic laws it fluctuates when current flows. Voltage drops when current is applied and it rises when the current is stopped. The amount of the drops and rises are bigger when the events occur faster and they are smaller when they occur slower (ohm's law for inductors).
Viewed over a long period of time the overall voltage is pretty much constant, but it's crucial for the processor that the voltage doesn't drop below a minimal threshold to function properly.
To guarantee that the voltage never drops below a threshold the overall voltage for the whole system is in most cases (other techniques or workarounds also exist) set higher than needed for the majority of the time and thus producing more heat than needed (for the majority of the time).
AMD uses a system of adaptive clocking which dynamically adjusts the cycle time (e.g., decreasing the frequency) to tolerate the fluctuation, without increasing voltage or decreasing the threshold barrier significantly. Response latency is critical of an adaptive clocking system and the faster the system can respond, the greater the reduction in voltage and therefore the greater the power savings. The latency for current Ryzen processors are as low as 2 or 3 cycles, so it's really really fast.