Loved this comment on the Ars article:
Hopefully this prevents confusion between the electric and internal combustion Intel CPUs.
Core: Doesn’t yet go to 11.
Where’s my Ultra 3?
Ah yes, more brand cluttering and making it harder to tell what an 13G20H is
Doesn’t the article state you can still get the model number?
They dropped the “i” but I’m going to hold out for Ultra Instinct
You’re processor will start glowing a silver hue and you’ll feel the heat in your seat.
LOL
Really? What kind of lake are they now? Oh, meteor lake.
Remind me when they are at “toxic waste lake” or “out of lakes, sorry”
New Intel codename: Cornf lake
Oh boy can’t wait for my Intel™ Core 7 Ultra Pro Max
Intel® Core™ 7 Ultra Pro Max 14700KF
s/i/Ultra/g
If I had to guess, the “Ultra” chips will be desktop-class chips and just “Intel Core” will be mobile-class chips
Cool so we have even more SKUs and consumers are gonna get more confused. They don’t even know the difference between generational models they just think “oh that i7 that’s the fastest one” and don’t know that it’s not the newest model.
Have not used an intel CPU since 4th gen. That was the last gaming PC I built and then my work got me started using macs. I don’t know if I could go back from the efficiency of the apple M line chips in a laptop form factor. I think it’ll be interesting to see if the rebrand does anything meaningful in the fight between their Core series and AMDs ryzen🤷🏻♂️
I’m not an apple fan at all, but switched to a pro book for the M2s. The difference in power consumption and battery life is just on a whole other level from everything else out there.
The main issue is actually Windows and it’s awful standby behavior. It’s a known issue but nobody knows if it’ll ever get fixed.
So what is it that differentiates the “ultra” processors, is it the new K line?
Other than a price hike?
This is just as confusing as trying to figure out what graphics card to get for a computer. With all the brands using different naming and number conventions, it’s hard to understand.
Yeah, when the Wikipedia page for the Radeon RX 7000 includes this warning:
Not to be confused with the Radeon HD 7000 series, an earlier series of GPUs developed by AMD.
You know things have gotten a bit out of hand with respect to AMD’s GPU naming conventions.