Intel has had an immeasurable impact on the modern world of computing. Coming from the early days of being a pioneer in the growth of computation, Intel has remained a fixture in CPUs, GPUs, and related technologies.
Intel has launched the Arc Pro B70 and B65 GPUs, designed for AI inference and professional workloads, featuring up to 32 GB of GDDR6 memory and full PCIe 5.0 support.
Intel is reportedly preparing Intel Core G3 handheld chips based on Panther Lake, with Arc B390 integrated graphics gains as the main hook. Here’s what that could mean for portable gaming PCs.
Available across three tiers, the Galaxy Book6 Pro and Ultra models offer 120Hz Dynamic AMOLED 2X displays with 1,000 nits peak brightness, with a side-serving of Galaxy AI and cross-device ecosystem perks.
HP’s CES 2026 plans have leaked, showing a major AI PC push across EliteBook business laptops, OmniBook consumer systems, OMEN gaming hardware, Chromebooks, and accessories.
A new rumor says Intel’s Core Ultra 200K Plus refresh could add E-cores and raise rated DDR5 support, while keeping prices steady and sticking with LGA1851 motherboards.
Lenovo’s 2026 refresh introduces Panther Lake-powered ThinkPads and the motorized Auto Twist laptop, featuring AI-driven rotation and high-res 10MP webcams to redefine premium business productivity.
Early benchmarks show Intel’s Arc B370 iGPU outperforming previous-gen Arc GPUs and approaching mid-range NVIDIA laptop GPUs, signaling major improvements for upcoming Panther Lake notebooks.
At CES 2026, Lenovo going all-in on AI (like every other company), but it’s hiding all the fun goodies in the back, and I’m excited about what might be coming.
Remember when Intel launched its Arrow Lake-S desktop processors (the Core Ultra 200S series) late last year? The reception was a bit lukewarm. But new data shows it’s been quietly getting way better with age. According to some fresh benchmarks from Phoronix, the flagship Core Ultra 9 285K is now running about 9% faster on […]
Analyst Ming‑Chi Kuo claims Intel may start manufacturing Apple’s entry-level M-series chips by mid-2027. It’s not a revival of Intel-powered Macs, but a behind-the-scenes shake-up that could reshape Apple’s supply chain and how future MacBooks are built.
Intel is touting a 50% gain in CPU and GPU performance, alongside a big jump in efficiency and an NPU ready for on-device AI for the upcoming Panther Lake series processors.
Reports from TSMC indicate that next-gen process nodes might be up to 50% more expensive than the current generation, and this could make GPUs cost more, too.