So this seems to be related to the BIOS/OS CPU powerstate control.
Specifically PPC in the BIOS appears to be the issue.

Here is a link to HP advisory as it relates to a similar VMware issue
(in actuality, its not a vmware issue):
http://h20565.www2.hp.com/portal/site/hpsc/template.PAGE/public/kb/docDisplay?javax.portlet.begCacheTok=com.vignette.cachetoken&javax.portlet.endCacheTok=com.vignette.cachetoken&javax.portlet.prp_ba847bafb2a2d782fcbb0710b053ce01
=wsrp-
navigationalState%3DdocId%253Demr_na-c03543898-4%257CdocLocale%253D%257CcalledBy%253D&javax.portlet.tpst=ba847bafb2a2d782fcbb0710b053ce01&ac.admitted=1408113098173.876444892.492883150

Now hilariously this SAME issue occurs on most ANY HP motherboard after
a certain date (for instance, my issue is with a workstation).

If you have a workstation, go into the BIOS and disable ANYTHING related
to power regulation, let it run in turbo mode, if C_states are an
option, disable them.

This has resolved it for me for 2 days thus far, which is quite an
accomplishment with how often it was crashing before.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1318551

Title:
  Kernel Panic - not syncing: An NMI occurred, please see the Integrated
  Management Log for details.

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