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Solve : Apple or Intel. Who is moving into the future?? |
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Answer» This is not exactly news, but it might be. (This is Other.) Attend any major tech exhibition and you’ll find Intel announcing or reannouncing mildly improved processors. Whether you’re at IFA in Berlin, CES in Las Vegas, or Computex in Taipei, the spiel is always the same: the future is wireless, battery life matters to everyone,In short, the article ALLEGES that Intel is just not moving fast enough to to LEAD the way into the future of electronic technology. Here is the link: https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/3/17191986/apple-intel-cpu-processor-design-competition Meanwhile, here is the latest blurb from Intel: https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/3/17188994/intel-core-i9-laptops-coffee-lake-14-nm-architecture-processor-faster-u-series-i5-i7-optane Quote Ever since Intel announced its first Core i9 processor for desktops last year, it’s only been a matter of time until the company brought that branding to laptops, too. Today, Intel is announcing its first Core i9 chip for laptops, with what it claims is “the best gaming and CREATION laptop processor Intel has ever built.”Yes, that is also from The Verge. But others have also reported the Intel stuff recently. The new CPU might be called the Core i9 chip. Apparently Apple is not buying into the hype. Quote In short, the article alleges that Intel is just not moving fast enough to to lead the way into the future of electronic technology. This assertion isn't anywhere near accurate....Just cause iNtel doesn't do it the way Apple chooses to do it is irrelevant. For reaffirmation of this take a look at Market share.Apple's mobile devices are where their real revenue lies, and as a result their laptops and desktops and their Operating Systems for such have been B-team efforts. This seems like an effort to effectively sunset all their Desktop and Laptop efforts and the "general" OS X Operating System, and have everything running some version of iOS, RATHER than have separated iOS and OS X. It doesn't make much sense for Apple to effectively point fingers at Intel when Apple hasn't even been properly using Intel's processors anyway. Even their highest-end offerings have insufficient cooling to prevent the CPU from thermal throttling. The Core i9 Processor is not "new"- as your second quote mentions it was announced last year and they have been available since around November 2017. They aren't relevant to Apple, however, who as mentioned is barely able to engineer their systems for TDP of the i7 processors in their highest end SKUs. They are fundamentally the "Extreme Edition" processors which provide the highest core COUNT, overclocking, and performance at a massive price premium.. They aren't even an upgrade option from i3/i5/i7 since they actually use a different socket. |
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