Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Intel reveals 11th-Gen desktop CPUs are coming in early 2021

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

In a blog post highlighting how advances in its processors have helped gamers, Intel announced that its next-generation desktop processor will be coming in early 2021. The 11th-gen processor is also known by its Rocket Lake code name, and will include some of the key features that Intel introduced in its 11th-gen laptop Tiger Lake processors, such as support for the faster PCIe 4.0 specification, and Wi-Fi 6 for wireless connectivity.

Recommended Videos

“I’m also happy to confirm that the next generation 11th-gen Intel Core desktop processors (code-named “Rocket Lake”) is coming in the first quarter of 2021 and will provide support for PCIe 4.0,” Intel vice president and general manager of the VR, gaming, and e-sports group John Bonini wrote in a blog post on Medium, noting that “gaming is in Intel’s DNA.”

The company’s announcement that Rocket Lake will make its way to gaming desktops comes in the middle of partner Nvidia’s GPU Technology Conference and ahead of rival AMD’s scheduled launch event for its next-generation Ryzen processors. Intel’s 11th-gen desktop processor will likely have to compete in the same space as the rumored Ryzen 5000 processors.

Intel

Neither Intel nor Bonini gave specifics about what to expect for its 11th-gen processors, but the company did highlight processor frequency for its 10th-gen lineup, so its next-generation silicon could once again offer faster base and clock speeds along with support for overclocking in a bid to appeal to gamers and creatives.

This would reinforce Intel’s lead in high-end gaming, as per-clock performance tends to matter more than the extreme core counts AMD provides. On the other hand, it doesn’t address AMD’s core count lead, which often makes AMD hardware a better value for productivity — and sometimes in midrange gaming rigs, too.

“Processor frequency remains a key consideration because many popular apps and high-performance games scale with frequency,” Bonini stated. “Intel’s current generation of processors — led by the Core i9-10900K on desktop and the Core i9-10980HK on mobile — achieves an industry-leading 5.3GHz.”

In addition to revealing a launch timeline for the 11th-gen desktop silicon, Intel highlighted its partnerships with “world-class developers and publishers” as part of its gaming focus. These partnerships, the company claimed, helps to optimize the performance of games and allows developers to build in new features ahead of a title’s release.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Windows 11’s modern Media Player is somehow worse than the version from 17 years ago
The modern Media Player for Windows 11 is slower and heavier than the classic version
Windows 11 media player user interface

Microsoft has released a new Insider Preview update for the modern Windows 11 Media Player. However, the app is facing criticism after tests revealed it uses more memory and opens local video files more slowly than the classic 17-year-old Windows Media Player.

The update adds some useful fixes, including better captions, clearer codec errors, and improved file recognition. But the biggest complaints remain higher RAM usage and paid codec support for some common video formats. The update is not available to everyone yet. Media Player version 11.2605.14.0 has only arrived on Experimental Insider builds as part of Microsoft’s June 12 Insider Preview releases.

Read more
If you have a Mac, you should try this free and beautifully-designed disk space tool
Radix is a free open-source alternative to paid Mac disk analyzers
File, Electronics, Mobile Phone

Running out of storage on a Mac is common, but Apple’s built-in storage tools are not always great at showing what is actually taking up space. You usually get broad categories, but finding the exact folders, downloads, app files, or old projects causing the problem can still take some work.

Radix is a free, open-source Mac app that tries to make that process clearer. It is a disk space analyzer that scans a folder, drive, or volume and displays the results in an interactive sunburst chart. Rather than digging through folders manually, you get a visual overview of how storage is being used across your drive.

Read more
This free Mac app puts stunning glassy widgets on your lock screen
WidgetScreen brings weather, calendar, battery, and music widgets to your Mac lock screen
Aquatic, Water, Animal

The Mac lock screen has always felt a little underused. You see the time, your wallpaper, and not much else. macOS already supports desktop widgets, but once your Mac is locked, that extra information disappears.

WidgetScreen is trying to fix that in a pretty simple way. The free Mac app, made by UK computer science student Sam Cook, adds glassy widgets to the lock screen so you can quickly check things like the weather, clock, calendar, battery, music playback, countdowns, and system information.

Read more