Read more.Says it helps enable new experiences. Shares processing and encoding benchmarks.
Read more.Says it helps enable new experiences. Shares processing and encoding benchmarks.
Every time I see an Intel doc release, i struggle to not channel Linus Torvalds position that Intel is trying to stay relevant by just stuffing as much random extraneous stuff into their processors using ASICs to accelerate tasks than actually making a faster, better processor.
What here has actually changed except a ton of ASIC based compute elements to supplement the GPU and CPU?
Deep link sounds nice, tandemising the two GPU elements is a natural progression but isn't this relatively already baked into software? IIRC, Premiere will use the GPU for showing preview while decoding on the iGPU (someone correct me here, please).
Last edited by Tabbykatze; 02-11-2020 at 12:29 PM.
They're stalling, trying to prevent a share price crash. It'll take them years to bring to market something which is competitive, if they're still able that is.
We really need then to be, at least they have a load of cash, so the industry "shouldn't" flip and be completely one sided in AMD's favour (long term), but that all depends on Intel clearing out and installing competent management.
Intel still got multiple other brands to sell to be honest, but they should really get along with the 7nm and below Tech for their CPU's especially if they want to stay in that market, or they may end losing to other brands that takt the torch up with AMD for an instance.
But...it's not.
Althought it might have a similar density/shape/swiss cheese/chardonnay, it's astoundingly different in both form and function. It's hot unstable and expensive.
So we are going to keep the hark on, thanks, because Intel shouldn't get a free pass, let alone their competitors
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