News
Intel’s latest batch of processors is finally here. It seems like we only just received the Alder Lake products, but as of October 20, the 13th Gen Raptor Lake processors are officially in the wild.
Raptor Lake is Intel's 13th generation of processors, and they're finally here. Here's everything you need to know about specs, pricing, and performance.
The raptor was saved from a devastating leg injury using a pioneering fish skin treatment, then released to freedom days ...
Raptor Lake refers to Intel's 13th and 14th Gen CPUs for mobile and desktop. Michelle Johnston Holdhaus, CEO of Intel Products, explained that cost is the driving factor behind the ongoing success ...
The Intel Raptor Lake Like | Image: Intel Leading the 13th generation line is the $589 i9-13900K, offering 24 processor cores (8 P-Cores and 16 E-Cores), 32 processor threads, and clock speeds up ...
Intel’s debut Raptor Lake volley will be paired with Z790 motherboards, an upgraded chipset that now adds support for DDR5-5600 and -5200 memory, as well as DDR4-3200 memory.
Just as interestingly, the 14th Gen Raptor Lake CPU performance on average was only three percent faster than the 13th Gen models. This is also to be expected since despite earlier exciting rumors ...
Raptor Lake owners won't have to wait long for BIOS updates to arrive with the new firmware update. ComputerBase reports that some motherboard makers, such as ASRock, are already releasing BIOS ...
However, Alderon Games reports nearly a total failure rate with its Raptor Lake-powered machines. Alderon Games has concluded that Intel's 13th and 14th Gen chips are defective.
With very little fanfare, Intel has launched a range of Raptor Lake CPUs (via HardwareLuxx) for the embedded market that have no E-cores in them—they're 100% P-cores.
The new lineup of Intel Arrow Lake gaming CPUs for the desktop is expected to launch in the near future, but we've already seen the first Core 200 chips in the form of the Intel Lunar Lake ...
The Raptor Lake CPU used in the test was an Intel Core i7-13700K. Although the same motherboard wasn't used for both tests, since that's impossible, it's as close as one could get to that ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results