Thursday, April 30, 2020

Intel Unveils Beastly 5.3GHz Desktop CPU for Content Creators and Gamers PetaPixel

Intel has finally unveiled its much-leaked lineup of 10th-generation “S-series” desktop CPUs headlined by the flagship 10-core Core i9-10900K—a beastly 5.3GHz chip that Intel is calling the “world’s fastest gaming processor.”

If you’ve been following the great CPU battle of 2020, you’ll know that Intel is playing catch-up. Still stuck on the 14nm process, the company is struggling to keep up with AMD’s more efficient and incredibly powerful 7nm Ryzen 3000 processors, especially the $500 12-core Ryzen 9 3900X (to say nothing of the 16-core 3950X, or the Threadripper chips).

That’s the CPU that the $490 Core i9-10900K is going to compete against, and as with the recently announced H-series laptop chips, Intel’s strategy seems to be “MOAR power.”

With a maximum “Thermal Velocity Boost” frequency of 5.3GHz on a single core, or 4.9GHz all-core, the new 10-core i9 is trying desperately to hold on to Intel’s lead for gamers and certain kinds of content creators who benefit more from single-core performance and can’t take full advantage of AMD’s higher core counts.

Even if you step “down” from the flagship and go with the $375 8-core Core i7-10700K, you still get a chip that can TurboBoost up to 5.1GHz on a single core, or 4.7GHz on all cores, while giving you a higher base clock of 3.8GHz.

And as of this release, even the low-end S-series processors, headlined by the $150 4-core Core i3-10320, will give you hyperthreading. Previously, you had to step up to an i5 to take advantage of that.

All of the new S-series processors—but especially the flagship i9-10900K—should provide a noticeable speed and performance boost for content creators, especially if you’re running a machine that’s more than a year old.

For example, compared to a 3-year-old machine, Intel claims the new i9 is 35 percent faster at 4K video editing, 15 percent faster for video editing in general, and will offer “31 percent better overall system performance.”

Does that mean that you should pick an Intel chip over AMD’s Ryzen 9? Probably not. Even at a lower maximum frequency than the Intel chips, the 7nm Ryzen chips will be much easier to cool and more efficient overall, which will probably result in similar (if not better) performance. We’ll have to wait for some proper benchmarks to know for sure, but despite what that impressive 5.3GHz spec might imply, this represents Intel barely catching up… not pulling ahead.

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