With tweaked versions of AMD's Precision Boost and XFR coming with Ryzen 2nd Generation CPUs and Intel removing all-core boost specifications from its specifications, could this year's fight be all about boost frequencies?
Cases have too many SSD mounts, and motherboard M.2 ports should support SATA and PCIe SSDs - and I'm just getting started.
Water-cooled PCs are a hot topic and a big focus for marketing budgets, but they shouldn't be confused with case mods.
Intel has work to do in 2018: AMD is strong at the low end and the Core i7-8700K is bettered by Ryzen 7 in some benchmarks despite costing a lot a more.
2018 looks set for more CPU battles with AMD refining its Ryzen CPUs and Zen core and Intel posed to release low-end chipsets and eight-core mainstream CPUs.
Intel has more powerful CPUs than ever, but are the blurred lines between mainstream and high-end desktop too fuzzy and making some models pointless?
The CPU market has never had a year like 2017, and it all comes down to Ryzen.
AMD and Intel's flagships are now available, and the world has seen the numbers. Who has come off best?
Intel's Coffee Lake CPUs are nearly upon us and, if the rumours are true, so are its first mainstream core boosts in a decade.
If six-core Intel CPUs do appear in 2017, what impact will this have on AMD and the CPU market as a whole?
October 14 2021 | 15:04