The reason is the max Hz in all of the kernel and user space tools is
the max Hz while all cores are active.  Turbo Boost only comes into
effect when running un-parallelized code on only a fraction of the
cores.  So, I've seen my Envy 15 hit 3.0GHz in Windows, using Intel's
Turbo Boost utility, but only during single threaded, heavy activity.
Otherwise, if it's multithreaded, the system won't go above 1.6GHz,
which is the max Hz as far as the Linux system can tell.  So there's
some catch-up to be played there.


Another hint which leads me to this belief is that PowerTOP doesn't understand 
how to parse/represent TurboBoost, but the openSolaris version does, they 
patched it themselves.  Running openSolaris, I saw all of the different speeds 
listed, top to bottom, slowest to fastest, with the last entry changing as 
demand changed.  When I ran the linux version, I see the 931MHz state running 
at the bottom of the list of speeds, even though the speeds get higher going 
down the list.  Therefor, I "believe" it to be working properly since my speeds 
vary, fans vary, etc..

-- 
No fans, thermalzone on HP Envy 15 and HP DV6T Quad
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/463940
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