Check if PFsense functions with your NVMe drive.
Check if PFsense functions with your NVMe drive.
It's accurate, though a good reference for those newer CPUs. I switched from a 45W to a 15W chip and noticed the actual power use matched closely with the TDP change. One factor is that desktop boards tend to draw more power, while laptop chipsets are designed for efficiency. A Linux OS could likely reduce consumption further, which is why I prefer pfSense. BSD networking is generally a bit more efficient, and I observed this difference firsthand when using an x86 OpenWRT build. Of course, many kernel updates have altered the comparison since then—I don’t know how it stacks up today. QoS seems better implemented on Linux now, but would you really need it at gigabit speeds?