Source: www.cnet.com
Intel is very concerned that you may be using a five-year-old computer. The company claims there are at least 450 million computers still in service that are five or more years old.
So, one of the big selling points for the just-announced 8th generation of Core i-series CPUs is that these new chips are twice as fast as those found in five-year-old laptops. That’s not too much of a stretch, as we’ve seen massive performance improvements over the last five years in laptops, desktops, hybrids and tablets.
More potentially interesting is Intel’s claim of up to a 40-percent improvement over the current 7th-gen Core i-series CPUs, which many PC makers have only recently rolled out across their product lines. Intel called it a “once in a decade” performance jump in a briefing for reporters.
Kaby Lake, refreshed
Each new generation of Intel CPUs generally goes by a code name, but the 8th-gen chips will likely be split across (at least) two. These first 8th-gen chips, which Intel says are “designed specifically for thin and light premium notebooks and 2-in-1s,” keep the Kaby Lake code name from the 7th gen, although these are referred to as Kaby Lake R, for “refresh.”
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