

The tool itself is free and can be downloaded from here. So at least for that board (and probably others), you'd need to uninstall the utility to take back manual control of voltages, multipliers, and so forth. Tanous also noted that Intel's utility ignored changes made in his motherboard's BIOS (Gigabyte Z390 Aorus Master). Not surprisingly, Tanous found that better results can still be had by manually overclocking through the BIOS, though the gap in performance was not enormous in his testing. We have not had a chance to test it yet, but Jim Tanous at PCPerspective did. Intel describes its new tool as a "hyper-intelligent" utility that sets parameters "based upon individual performance potential." Your mileage will vary, of course. This new utility is different, in that it's supposed to automatically overclock your CPU.
