IT SEEMS WE’RE long past the days of monolithic chip designs—it’s all about providing a modular solution by carefully weaving core complexes together, and having different transistor sizes across different components. That way you create a processor that not only provides impressive performance but is also affordable and simple to mass-produce.
This is where Intel has come unstuck in the great core war, as its monolithic designs are far harder to produce, especially to add more cores to. To get around the loss in overall number of cores and lack of a die shrink, the company has been aggressively targeting clock speed to bolster its multi-core performance and hold on to the single-core IPC and gaming crown its held for so long.
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Denne historien er fra July 2020-utgaven av Maximum PC.
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Google Gemini vs. ChatGPT
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Frostpunk 2
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Elgato Facecam Neo
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Elgato Wave Neo
The Kanye West of mics: Easy to get into, but a little weird
Razer BlackWidow V4 75%
Solid and compact, with hot-swappable switches
Razer Wolverine V3 Pro
Razer's pro controller is even better than Microsoft's
Acer Predator GM712
2008 called, it wants its projector back
AndaSeat Kaiser 4 XL
A chair as big and as comfortable as they come
Gigabyte F027Q2
Speed is of the essence with this OLED screen
Acer Nitro 14
AMD puts on a good show, but it still lacks punch