Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-10-10 17:00:25| Engadget

Despite all the inroads AMD has made in recent years with its Zen desktop CPUs, Intel has broadly managed to maintain one critical edge against its longtime rival: gaming performance. For those looking to eke every possible frame out of the latest AAA games, the companys recent Core 5/7/9 often outperformed their AMD counterparts. Historically, however, that performance has come at the cost of power efficiency and thermals. Intels best 13th-genereation processors are absolute power-hungry beasts. That has limited their appeal, especially as small-factor PC builds have become more popular. On Thursday, Intel detailed its long-awaited Arrow Lake processors, announcing five new models arriving on October 24. With the new CPUs, Intel is promising a paradigm change. Compared to its previous generation Raptor Lake chips, the company said its goal was to reduce power consumption by 40 percent and internal package temperatures by as much as 10 degrees Celsius. Judging by the benchmarks Intel shared ahead of todays announcement, the company did just that. Intel Intels new flagship, the Ultra 9 285K, features a 24-core CPU design consisting of eight Lion Cove performance cores and 16 Skymont efficiency cores, and a maximum boost clock of 5.7GHz. It, alongside the rest of the current Arrow Lake family, also comes with a neural processing unit (NPU), a first for one of Intels desktop CPU. But those specs arent whats interesting about the 285K and its siblings. In lightly-threaded workloads, including tasks such as Zoom calls and select Cinebench benchmarks, Intel recorded the 285K drawing up to 58 percent less power than the 14900K, the companys 14th generation flagship. When it comes to gaming performance, the results are even more interesting. In Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2, for instance, Intel said it saw the 285K run the game on average 4% faster, while drawing 165W less of system power. Even in more GPU-intensive games such as Black Myth: Wukong, the 285K offers promising efficiency gains, with Intel noting it saw the CPU draw 34 fewer watts of total system power compared to the 14900K.  Those efficiency improvements translate to equally impressive thermal gains, with Intel noting its data shows the 285K runs, on average, about 13 degrees Celsius cooler than the 14900K during gaming loads. The new processor even offers similar gaming performance when users limit its power draw from Intel's default of 250W to 175W or 125W. For those who like to undervolt their CPU or plan to go with an ITX case and motherboard for their next build, that's exciting news.   I think its safe to say this is a huge turn of the corner for our desktop portfolio, said Robert Halleck, general manager of Intels AI and Technical Marketing units. Im confident your testing will match the numbers were talking about today. Intel On paper, Arrow Lake is exactly what Intel needs to claw its way back to sustainability; its easily the most efficient family of desktop processors the company has put out in a long time. However, whether that alone will be enough to turn Intels fortunes around is less clear. In the short term, the company faces a rival AMD that is more competitive than ever. In the long term, its difficult to say how much of Arrow Lakes efficiency should be solely attributed to Intels engineers. As recently as 2022, the company had maintained it would build the new processors using a combination of its own 20A fabrication process and TSMCs 3-nanometer technology. But then Intel recorded a $1.6 billion loss in Q2 of this year and said it would cut more than 15,000 jobs in an effort to reduce costs by $10 billion. Part of that plan involved fully outsourcing Arrow Lake manufacturing to a third party. At the time, Intel didnt specifically name TSMC. However, the list of companies capable of producing silicon at the density and scale required for Arrow Lake is very short. With Intel reportedly hitting a recent snag to get its next-generation 18A process off the ground, its clear the company still has a long ahead. When the Intel Core Ultra 9 285K arrives on October 24, it will cost $589. For those looking for a more affordable entry into Intel's Arrow Lake ecosystem, the company will also offer the 14-core Ultra 5 245KF for $294 and the 20-core Ultra 7 265K for $394. Alongside its KF sibling, which comes without an integrated Intel Xe GPU, the 265K looks like it will be the dark horse of Intel's Arrow Lake line. The company said that 265K runs about 15 degrees cooler than the 14900K and draws up to 188W less system power.  Alongside its new Arrow Lake processors, Intel also shared more information about its upcoming Arrow Lake H laptop chips, which the company said would arrive at the start of next year.  This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/intels-15th-gen-cpus-are-all-about-power-efficiency-and-thermals-150024246.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

12.01New typeface for Volvo treats legibility as a safety feature
11.01Google's new commerce framework cranks up the heat on 'agentic shopping'
11.01California's governor plans to set aside $200 million for state EV tax credits
11.01Wing's drone deliveries are coming to 150 more Walmarts
10.01Elon Musk says X's new algorithm will be made open source next week
10.01GameStop reportedly shuts down more than 400 US stores
10.01An Instagram data breach reportedly exposed the personal info of 17.5 million users
10.01Dont count on Baldurs Gate 3 coming to Switch 2, as least for now
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

12.01New typeface for Volvo treats legibility as a safety feature
12.01Roblox is trying to stop U.S. adults from talking to kids on its platform
12.01The surprising ways AI could reduce bias at work
12.01Andrew Freris on political pressure on the Fed, soaring gold and where to invest in a Messy world
12.01Silver bulls now eyeing Rs 3 lakh milestone. Should you buy or wait for dip?
12.01Vets under corporate pressure to increase revenue, BBC told
12.01Monday Watch
12.01Q3 likely to be modest for IT, commentary more crucial than numbers: Sandip Agarwal
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .