It has been one of the computer industry’s longest running and most closely guarded product journeys. But finally, global microchip giant Intel has released its 4th Gen Xeon Scalable microprocessor which, until now, has been known only by its codename, Sapphire Rapids.
AMD finally unveiled its 4th Gen EPYC processors at an event in San Francisco earlier this month. With up to 96 cores in a single processor, the new line-up – which also includes the Compute Density-Optimized Zen 4C for EPYC Bergamo, and the Cache-Optimized Zen 4 V-Cache within the EPYC Genoa-X series – has been created for critical workloads across cloud, enterprise, and high-performance computing (HPC).
While Intel doesn’t quite dominate the CPU landscape as it did in the past, it can still set hares running like no other tech player. Its February announcement of the proposed release of the first 13th-gen CPUs in the second half of this year has had designers and developers on tenterhooks ever since.
The launch of the NVIDIA RTX™ A4500 professional graphics card last November was met with some bemusement, if not outright scepticism, by some reviewers. Why, with the RTX™ A4000 (16 GB) and RTX™ A5000 (24 GB) already on the market, was there a need to plug a gap for which there didn’t appear to be a ready market? But they hadn’t reckoned with a global semiconductor shortage which made accessibility of both cards sporadic, thereby pushing up the price of both.
Nvidia has teased the possibility that future cards of theirs may be manufactured by Intel. This could take Nvidia to the top of the competition after years of rivalry with AMD.
Innodisk has recently launched a M.2 10GbE network card, the first of its kind leveraging M.2s PCIe interface to offer a 10GbE connectivity in a compact package.
As more powerful expansion cards are launched each year, The need for increased PCIe bandwidth is ever rising. PCIe 4.0 has been a reliable backbone for these technologies since its introduction in 2017.
With the recent arrival of DDR5, is it worth upgrading from your current Machine? DDR5 opens the door to improved performance capabilities, however, early production pains and industry shipping delays have led to shortages and higher pricing. Is it truly worth investing in new hardware?
After first teasing the release during January’s virtual CES 2021 event, Intel has now confirmed the launch of its long-awaited Rocket Lake 11th Gen Series of CPUs.
While it’s been a long time coming since our initial exploration of Intel’s upcoming 11th gen NUCs back in April, we’re excited to reveal that these are finally on their way!
Earlier this year, AMD released the 3rd generation of their Ryzen Threadripper PRO series, including what is being dubbed the most powerful desktop x86 processor ever, the 3995WX.
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