Lunar Lake
Latest about Lunar Lake

Even after performance fixes and price cuts, Intel's CEO admits that it 'fumbled the football' with Arrow Lake CPUs but claims that Nova Lake will fix everything
By Nick Evanson published
News Pinky promise?

A gaming benchmark face-off between AMD's Ryzen Z2 Extreme and Intel's Core Ultra 7 258V is surprisingly close, proving once more that Lunar Lake is the best chip Intel has made in years
By Nick Evanson published
News Even at 17 W, the Ryzen's lead isn't as big as its specs suggest it should be.

Intel's next-gen Panther Lake mobile chip will be a portable gaming beast with 50% more Xe cores than Lunar Lake, according to the latest shipping manifest leak
By Jeremy Laird published
News 12 Xe3 cores in Panther Lake versus 8 Xe2 cores in Lunar Lake.

Intel claims 18A, the node Pat bet the company on, is either 25% faster or 38% more efficient than Intel 3. Though that's a node Intel didn't have enough faith in to release for desktops or laptops
By Jeremy Laird published
News A tricky comparison, given there are no Intel 3 chips in PCs.

Intel claims its next-gen 'Panther Lake' mobile chips will combine the power efficiency of Lunar Lake mobile with the performance of Arrow Lake-H desktop
By James Bentley published
Computex Hopefully, we'll see it in a handheld soon.

A little power management goes a long way in the latest Intel drivers giving a free 10% fps boost to the MSI Claw AI+ handheld and any other Lunar Lake device
By Jacob Fox published
News And an average increase of 25% in 1% Low FPS, though only at 17 W or lower.

MSI will switch to AMD chips for its high-end Claw handheld PC if the rumour mill is to be believed
By Nick Evanson published
News The current version uses an Intel Lunar Lake chip, which is potent but pricey.

Intel is still using TSMC for 30% of its wafer demands: 'We were talking about trying to get that to zero as quickly as possible. That's no longer the strategy'
By Andy Edser published
News So, not much has changed then.

Ex-Intel exec, Raja Koduri, blames the bureaucratic 'PowerPoint snakes' within the company for its current issues: 'These processes multiply and coil around engineers'
By Andy Edser published
News Such processes, he says, are "constraining their ability to execute on the product roadmap with the boldness it requires'."
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