A guy had the issue and months later came back explaining that he had some king of power issue and had to plug in only the full charged baterry into the device, and he said that the device was turbo boosting. Anyway, I had read something similar in another forum post. Then the Turbo Boost is completely useless in this devices. Only over clocks when baterry full and device is super cool and just started. So, I guess the device is just made to work like that. I pluged in the power and did not do it anymore, I pluged the power with the battery in and did not do it anymore. But it did not last long, only like 3 mins, I opened a video game to see if it would stay overclocking and it was not anymore. So I started the device just with the baterry, (the device was cool since I just started it and pluged in ONLY TO THE BATTERY NOT THE POWER) and when I got into windows the turbo boost monitor came up and I saw it was overclocking. The interesting part is that I was about to go to sleep and I turned on the laptop to check something I forgot to do and since I was not in my desk I had to grab the baterry and plug it in. Only option in "advanced" that are useful out of 5 options are only 2 which are "enable vitualization" and "enable LAN something about the power usage" so I did disable the LAN option for power consumption and when I reestarted the computer still same issue. The bios in this devices are the most simple bios I've seen really. The reason why I wanted to update or reinstall bios is because the bios in this computers do not have an options for turbo boost enable or disable. It seems that there's no updates for drivers for windows 10 in this model. When I tried to do it from the HP website an administrator blcoked it. I tried to update bios but it did not let me, neither with the windows commands or from the HP website. Well, I think I have solved the issue (NOT FIXED IT) but solved what's goin on.
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