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 ...
It feels cliche at this point, but it’s true. Intel can’t catch a break. The new Arrow Lake-H chips feel like a tide shift ...
Now, Intel is starting to at least think about developing a CPU architecture that just runs 64-bit apps and operating systems. The company quietly posted an update to its webpage with info ...
After all, Framework has built a business on modular laptops. But it hasn't gained widespread currency. Maybe now it will thanks to a new modular PC push from none other than Intel. In a blog post ...
Apart from the release date, there was no further information on Nova Lake, except that, according to the Intel manager, the architecture ... i.e., a total of 48 CPU cores. Together with the ...
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Intel's first blockbuster chip was the 8088 – and it changed everything 45 years agoThe Intel 8088 Micro-processor ran at 5MHz ... in the 8088 versus the 8086 was the use of a full 16-bit internal architecture but mated with an 8-bit data bus. Without the 8088 we wouldn't ...
The Register on MSN11d
Intel sinks $19B into the red, kills Falcon Shores GPUs, delays Clearwater Forest XeonsWhile Falcon Shores has effectively been canned, Intel's Clearwater Forest Xeons have only been delayed. The parts, slated to ...
That's the purported core configuration right now, which may change - and the other question with Nova Lake is will it be ...
Intel is shelving its planned Falcon Shores AI infrastructure system for datacenters and will instead use it as an internal ...
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tom's Hardware on MSNIntel cancels Falcon Shores GPU for AI workloads — Jaguar Shores to be successorIntel's next-generation AI and HPC GPU will only be used internally, Jaguar shores will be the real successor for Gaudi 3 in ...
AMD and Intel are fiercely competing in the x86 CPU market, with AMD gaining market share in 2024 despite Intel's performance improvements.
Back in the last century, Intel saw itself faced with a need to have ‘second source’ suppliers of its 8088 and 8086 processors ... an integral part of the x86 architecture.
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