Waterloo Region Record

Intel calls new PC chip massive leap forward

- Ian King

Intel, the world’s biggest maker of semiconduc­tors, says its new processors are going to deliver the biggest bump in performanc­e that personal computer users have experience­d in years.

The eighth generation of its Core line will provide as much as a 40 per cent jump over its predecesso­r, according to the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company. That’s a leap in performanc­e that arguably happens only once in a decade, Intel says. New laptops built on the chips will come to market in September.

Intel, whose chips are the heart of more than 80 per cent of the world’s PCs, has been remarkably successful in a market that’s been declining since it peaked in 2011 and is now more than 100 million units smaller than it was. In the second quarter, Intel’s PC chip unit posted a 12 per cent increase in sales even as overall shipments of PCs continued their slide.

Intel’s winning strategy — one that the new lineup will try to keep going — has been to persuade consumers that they need to buy up, spending extra on computers with more expensive chips even though they’re not replacing their old PCs as often as they did.

The challenge the new Core systems will face is that Advanced Micro Devices, Intel’s only remaining rival in PC processors, is bringing its own new design to market this year. Chips built on its Zen are able to challenge Intel parts on performanc­e for the first time in years, AMD has said, and they’re cheaper.

The new range of chips from Intel will provide a massive leap forward in performanc­e compared with the 450 million PCs that are currently in use and that are more than five years old, Intel says. In that period, processors have become twice as fast at crunching data and the machines themselves have shrunk to be half as thick as they were. Editing 4K video shot on a GoPro camera might not even be possible on older machines, while with the new chips the time needed to do such tasks will be reduced to

single-digit minutes versus tens of minutes on previous generation machines.

Intel says it has achieved the step up in capabiliti­es by adding more computing cores to the chips, typically doubling up to four or eight, a significan­t step forward for processors used in the smallest laptops. Adding cores helps a computer’s ability to perform multiple tasks in parallel, Intel says.

Research shows that in the U.S. at least, people still spend more time on their laptops than they do on their smartphone­s, Intel says. It’s hoping to persuade them that with the new processors, that time will be more productive.

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