While that is ****ty for people who want to order prebuilt systems in those states... I have some questions around this that I'm too lazy to actually research because I am not in those states.
1. If the systems are assembled in the states themselves do they have the same power consumption requirements?
2. Can you get around this by shipping the video card itself as a distinct line item to be installed by the end user or by an onsite visit from Dell?
3. Can system integrators build custom systems for end users that are local to them and sell to them even though they would bypass the power allotment allowed?
4. Are businesses allowed a different class of hardware power limits? I easily have servers I build that need dual 1100 watt power supply's just to run.
Ok now I'm going to read the article... I know bad reader!
Alright I've done a bit more research here and the requirements are NOT horrendous and only impact consumer devices, meaning Desktops and Laptops.
The vast majority of Laptops even gaming laptops are perfectly fine here. As they are generally consume far less than 30% of their max power draw when sitting idle.
The 'crime' here is that Desktop class computers are consuming greater than 50% of their rated max power draw when sitting just turned on. This should be a easy hurdle to overcome and one I for one actually would like to see.
Yes it sucks in the immediate future but really... wouldn't we all benefit from this. What this requirement isn't is draconian or forcing people to use sub standard systems... (as everyone seems to be reacting to it as.) But more a requirement to say. "Hey when you're not gaming and surfing for online video stimulation (ahem) maybe don't use near the same amount of power just to be turned on?"
I don't see the crime here... If someone can point this out to me it would be great.
It's the same as trucks and cars today that turn off when you're at a stoplight for more that a few seconds but auto start when you want to keep going. It saves on pollution output and keeps things green longer.
Oh and here is the article I found:
https://www.theverge.com/2016/12/14...y-efficiency-standards-california-first-in-us
Yes this has been known since 2016 as a coming 2021 requirement. This didn't catch Dell or anyone else flat footed. They should have known about this requirement since day well since December of 2016.