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Budget in price, mainstream in aspiration.
Client Computing still its bread and butter, though.
Intel doubled its Core i3 core counts, and the Core i3-8350K costs just £160, but is it still a bargain compared to AMD's Ryzen 5 quad-cores?
Pledges 100-fold performacne boost by 2020.
The final big CPU launch of the year sees Intel aiming at AMD in the mid-range to give Ryzen a bloody nose, with the Core i7-8700K seeing a 50 percent core boost compared to the Core i7-7700K for not a lot more cash.
No sign of Bronze or Platinum, though.
'The relentless voice of the customer.'
Claims massive improvements over existing tech.
Intel reclaims the performance crown as the maker of the fastest desktop CPU that sports 18 cores, but at what cost?
Including its 'best gaming processor ever'.
Where does Intel's HEDT Skylake-X hex-core fit in amongst an increasingly crowded desktop CPU market?
'A generation ahead' of the competition, it claims.
Intel's Coffee Lake CPUs are nearly upon us and, if the rumours are true, so are its first mainstream core boosts in a decade.
Record fine now at risk.
Including the classic Core i7-6700K.
Offers up to 18c/36t to fight off Threadripper.
10 times faster than the Myriad 2.
If six-core Intel CPUs do appear in 2017, what impact will this have on AMD and the CPU market as a whole?
Still no official announcement, though.
Appears to cede the market to ARM.
Won't be going to AMD, though.
The Fathom in a new dress.
Mocks 'glued-together' dice.
Denies Pentium discontinuation, too.
October 14 2021 | 15:04