Intel in his new generation computer chip: “Panther Lake will take everything from LC Lunar at level”

Almost 14 months ago, Intel launched its first multi-tile processor, codenamed Meteor Lake, for laptop PCs. Just nine months later, it was joined by the much-improved Lunar Lake chip, for the ultra-low power market and at this year’s CES event, Intel briefly demonstrated its successor, Panther Lake. As this is the first processor to be made on Intel’s 18A process node, the little chip garnered quite the attention.

2024 is almost certainly a year that Intel would prefer everyone to forget about and at this year’s mega-tech CES event, it’s been singing its own praises regarding how it plans to bring things around in the coming months. Top of the list, despite only appearing briefly at the conference, was Panther Lake—the architectural successor to the well-received Lunar Lake.

The interim co -star Michelle Johnston Holthaus had a pattern of the little chip so that the multitude of nesters can see. It was almost everything we really observed about Lake Panther, Holthaus did the most productive to announce it.

“Panther Lake, our flagship product at Intel 18a, will be introduced at the moment later this year. You will take everything you like about Lac Lunar, all the advances in architecture, in the level. We already have some system that runs Lake Panther, and we are already standard for all of our major customers.

A variety of other computers employing LAC Panther fleas were exhibited at some other booth, however, since the processor is still under development, no one was allowed to fiddle with the machines or practice them.

Not that Panther Lake will really matter for PC gaming because while some gaming laptops have sported Meteor Lake CPUs, almost none are using Lunar Lake. The exception, and it is a very loose exception, is MSI’s Claw 8 handheld gaming PC. That’s clearly not a laptop but Lunar Lake does pretty well in that format, so there’s a good chance that Panther Lake might appear in the odd handheld or two.

The only thing we know about Intel’s next-gen processor is that it wouldn’t possibly use DRAM in the package like the moon lake. This is worth helping to make the chip more acceptable to formula sellers, who need to offer consumers a wide variety of products, especially in the budget sector.

Investors will be looking very carefully at how good Panther Lake is because it’s the first commercial chip to roll off Intel’s 18A production line. Previous CEO Pat Gelsinger famously “bet the whole company on 18A” and if the little CPU turns out to be a miniature marvel then his gamble will be fully justified. If it isn’t though, then it’s difficult to see how Intel Foundry can continue operating.

It can be fair for an nesting sector, however, many Intel fortunes will be executed in Lake Panther. For customer intelligence (that is, a competitive market), hopefully it will be as intelligent as Intel says.

Put CES 2025 a day: we are on the floor in Las Solada Las Vegas that cover all the newest ads of some of Tech’s most important names, Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Asus, Razer, MSI and more.

Nick, the game and the PCs met for the first time in 1981, with the love story starting in a Sinclair ZX81 in the form of kit and an electronic book about Zx Basic. He ended up adjusting to an instructor of Physics and Science of the PC, but in the past before the 1990s, it is time to cut his teeth to write for a British technical site that has long died. Then he did the same in Madonion, helping to write assistance files for 3dmark and PCMark. After a brief stay in Beyond3D. com, Nick joined Futuremark (renamed Madonion) in Time Time, as editor of his game and apparatus section, Yougamers. After preventing the site, it has become a professor of engineering and sciences of the PC for many years, but the writing error was lost. He chose 4 years at Techspot. com and more than one hundred long articles above all and anything. He freely supports being too obsessed with GPU and Grindy World Open RPG, but who are not those days? 

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