Bundles it with 14th gen CPUs and laptops Both Ubisoft and Intel have announced their team-up for the upcoming Star Wars Outlaws game, with Intel bund...
Intel gen-12 Core HX puts 'desktop-caliber' CPUs in laptops • The Register theregister.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theregister.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Intel's 14nm Rocket Lake-S processors, in an era where AMD is at 7nm and smartphone processors are at 5nm, are Intel's newest 11th-gen processors, led by its flagship Intel Core i9-11900K, with Intel not having released an i9 range until AMD's challenge a few years ago.
Intel is a great example of why competition matters. For most of the 2010s, it released new generations of Core i-Series processors with what were more or less incremental improvements on a year-by-year basis, even if it is obvious that a 2021 processor is much better than one from 5 or 10 year ago.
Intel has been shamed by AMD's processor leadership and dominance over the past few years, so much so that Intel was forced to release a Core i9 series processor to compete, something Intel had never bothered to do in the decade or so before that.
11th-gen Intel Core chips promise boost to desktop PC performance
PC
11th-gen Intel Core desktop processors (code-named Rocket Lake-S) promise increased performance for desktop PCs (ILLUSTRATION: Handout).
The past year or so hasn’t been great for Intel if you’re thinking of PC chips – its smaller rival AMD stole much of its thunder with more powerful Ryzen chips as the market leader struggled to find a response. Well, today, Intel has unveiled its new 11th-gen Core S-series desktop processors.
More well known by the codename Rocket Lake-S, the new chips are built on a processor architecture called Cypress Cove. This is big because it finally replaces the previous Skylake architecture that has been around for the past five years – dinosaur-age in the chip industry.
Provided by Dow Jones By Robb M. Stewart Intel Corp.'s shares strengthened Tuesday after four new families of processors were unveiled by the technology company. In morning trading, the stock was 4.3% higher at $53.74, extending the gain early in the new year to $7.8%. The shares have fallen 8.9% over the last 12 months. Intel late Monday introduced new processors for business, education, mobile and gaming computing platforms. The launch included an 11th generation Core vPro platform and Evo vPro platform, and the introduction of its new N-series 10-nanometer Pentium Silver and Celeron processors that it said offer a balance of performance, media and collaboration for education systems.
The 8 Hottest Intel Processors Of 2020
In 2020, Intel continued to push the envelope for clock speeds, AI features, IoT capabilities and new ways of making computer chips. By Dylan Martin December 10, 2020, 03:27 PM EST
Processors For Laptops, Desktops, Servers And More
In the face of heated competition from AMD and companies making Arm-based processors, Intel brought out new processors in 2020 that pushed clock speeds to new highs while also introducing new AI features, IoT capabilities and new ways of making processors.
The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company’s new processors this year ranged from the new Lakefield hybrid processors for foldable and dual-screen PCs and 11th-generation Core Tiger Lake processors for ultra-thin laptops to the 10th-generation Core S-series for desktops and third-generation Xeon Scalable lineup for AI and big data workloads in servers.