dancing-bass
Well-known member
- Jan 3, 2011
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Not an N4 user, but as far as I understand the glass back is acting like a giant heat sink for the processor. I don't know if that was the intentional design or not, but that appears to be what's happening. Plus (as others have said) there is a quad core processor under there.
As well, the processor is thermo-protected. Meaning it will throttle itself if it's getting dangerously hot. If you continue to use it and internal temps climb beyond what it's pre-programmed "safe" levels are I would imagine it would force a power off/on cycle to completely shut down all load on the CPU/GPU. I don't see how this is an issue. Mind you I have not used one so I don't know how hot it does get. I do know my Gnex can get pretty warm if I'm pushing it hard (and it's overclocked to 1.5 instead of stock 1.2).
As well, the processor is thermo-protected. Meaning it will throttle itself if it's getting dangerously hot. If you continue to use it and internal temps climb beyond what it's pre-programmed "safe" levels are I would imagine it would force a power off/on cycle to completely shut down all load on the CPU/GPU. I don't see how this is an issue. Mind you I have not used one so I don't know how hot it does get. I do know my Gnex can get pretty warm if I'm pushing it hard (and it's overclocked to 1.5 instead of stock 1.2).