The reveal of Ice Lake, Intel's 10nm CPU microarchitecture, comes after the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company faced multiple years of delays in releasing 10nm processors, an advancement in CPUs ...
Compared to the Intel Arrow Lake-S CPUs, with the flagship Intel Core Ultra 9 285K equipped with eight P-cores and 16 E-cores ...
Chinese semiconductor firm Loongson Technology has unveiled ambitious plans to compete with global chipmakers like AMD and Intel. The company has announced the upcoming release of its 3C6000 ...
Leo talks about Intel - specifically TIGER LAKE. should you be excited? Well you can find out what LEO says in our video ...
Although Intel has yet to announce who will help produce the processors, TSMC already works with Intel to manufacture Arrow ...
version 3.1 and there is some bad news for users running Intel's older integrated graphics. The company has stated that it is ending support for its 10th Gen (Comet Lake on desktops and Ice Lake ...
In a nutshell: Intel has pulled back the curtain on its plans for its next-generation PC processors, codenamed "Nova Lake," set to launch in 2026. The revelations came during the chipmaker's quarterly ...
Intel is already sampling its next-generation core, Panther Lake, Intel’s new co-chief executive told reporters at CES 2025 on Monday morning. It will ship in the second half of 2025.
This was to be expected of course, but let’s break down what you can expect from Lunar Lake and read between the lines a bit along the way as well. As I’ve covered previously here, Intel’s ...
Almost 14 months ago, Intel launched its first multi-tile processor, codenamed Meteor Lake, for laptop PCs. Just nine months later, it was joined by the much-improved Lunar Lake chip, for the ...
Intel confirms its next-generation Panther Lake CPUs will arrive in 2H 2025, after that we'll see Nova Lake CPUs in 2026 to better compete with AMD.
In addition to expanding its processor lineup across both mobile and desktop at CES 2025, Intel also provided an update on Panther Lake. Well, it's more of a reiteration really, with Intel ...