
This kind of active effort on the part of the OS to do what it wants instead of what the hardware owner wants is the whole problem with Windows 10 in a nutshell. If you set that to disabled, it might accomplish what you want. If you go into Device Manager, you should see the device Windows keeps downloading the driver for. I have done that, at least I thought, in Windows settings. Another solution could be to keep windows from automatically downloading and updating the driver. One possible solution would be to turn off the turbo feature in the Bios, but I have no idea what settings those might be (see image). Regardless, windows will still download the driver, install it, and schedule it to run automatically. I’ve actually tried removing the driver, disabling the the task and the service. Windows 10 simply downloads the driver again. What I have found out is simply disabling or uninstalling the software app for the turbo boost doesn’t work. Second, is the operating system and a driver for the Intel turbo boost app. First in the Motherboard BIOS there is a switch or switches that turn the feature on. It’s my understanding that this involves two things. My motherboard uses a CPU that has the ability to use Intel’s turbo boost 3.0.
