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

Intel Wildcat Lake chips cost a pretty penny, but tests show they can’t touch the MacBook Neo

Intel's fanless chips are here, but the price tag might make you cry.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Text, Credit Card, Number
Intel

Intel’s Wildcat Lake is the company’s attempt to go toe-to-toe with the Apple MacBook Neo. The chips are tiny, featuring two performance cores, four efficiency cores, and a mini integrated GPU, and they’re efficient enough to run completely without a fan. 

That’s a genuinely exciting proposition for a Widows user who wants a slim, quiet laptop, but doesn’t want to switch to a new operating system. But it’s not all moonlight and roses, as the new chipsets come with a big catch. 

How fast are these chips?

Let’s talk about performance first. According to Notebookcheck, benchmarks for the Core 5 320 have already appeared on Geekbench, and the results are decent but not mind-blowing.

Geekbench 6 (single-core)Geekbench 6 (multi-core)Performance differenece
Intel Core 5 3202,5648,122
Apple A18 Pro3,5899,140+40% (single) / +13% (multi)
AMD Ryzen 5 7520U1,3744,434−46% (single) / −45% (multi)

It scores 2,564 in single-thread and 8,122 in multi-core performance. That makes it almost twice as fast as AMD’s budget Ryzen 5 7520U, which is a win. However, compared to the A18 Pro, it is considerably slower in both single-core and multi-core performance.

So, what’s the catch?

Intel has quietly listed the official chip prices, and they are, to put it gently, surprising. The Core 5 320 will cost $340, while the Core 7 360 clocks in at $426. 

Recommended Videos

For reference, the MacBook Neo costs $599 regular and $499 with a student discount. That means Intel’s base chip cost alone is more than half the cost of a regular MacBook Neo. 

So by the time these chips make it into a laptop, the final price will most likely be higher than the MacBook Neo. 

Is there any upside?

The big selling point here is the fanless design. Wildcat Lake runs at up to 11 watts without a fan and can push to 22 watts with one. That means laptop makers have real flexibility, and users get a quieter, slimmer device.

No Wildcat Lake laptops are available yet, and no manufacturer has confirmed pricing. When they do arrive, the chip cost suggests these won’t be bargain machines.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Intel details Project Firefly and how it’s pushing affordable laptops to unseat the MacBook Neo
Cheap laptops are finally getting the glow-up they deserve!
Intel firefly laptop prototype

It’s no secret that the Windows budget-market segment has been stagnating for years. While premium machines kept getting thinner, lighter, and faster, the affordable segment was stuck with five to seven year old technology and minor updates. 

Intel, it seems, wants to change that. In a recent Talking Tech interview, the company detailed how Project Firefly plans to drastically overhaul the budget laptop segment by creating a whole new ecosystem of laptops. 

Read more
Your ChatGPT bills could soon get a drastic price cut
The AI price war is here, and for once, your wallet is the winner
OpenAI logo on Microsoft surface

If you have ever winced at your monthly AI bill, here's some good news. According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, OpenAI is considering drastically lowering the prices it charges users as it fights to win customers from its rival, Anthropic.

The company is weighing significant cuts to its token pricing, the unit AI firms use to bill for their products. Interestingly, the move is in anticipation of similar cuts OpenAI expects from Anthropic. So whichever AI service you use, your bills should get smaller.

Read more
Waiting for your Framework Laptop 13 Pro? You’ll be waiting a bit longer
Good news: they found the bugs. Bad news: your laptop is late.
Framework laptop 13 pro in black

If you pre-ordered the Framework Laptop 13 Pro and were expecting it in June or July, I have some bad news. Framework has emailed customers announcing that shipments are being pushed back by about a month.

According to the email, posted by a Reddit user, the first-batch shipments are moving from late June to late July, with some units possibly slipping into early August. Framework plans to catch up to its original schedule in August, though the company admits the last August batches carry some risk of moving into early September.

Read more