Article 6H5RC The Morning After: Intel unveils its first chips built for AI work

The Morning After: Intel unveils its first chips built for AI work

by
Mat Smith
from Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics on (#6H5RC)

Just a week after AMD revealed its own Ryzen 8040 hardware, Intel has entered its own AI PC era. The company's new Core Ultra notebook chips, codenamed Meteor Lake, are Intel's first processors to include an NPU, or neural processing unit, for accelerating AI tasks.

Intel claims the Core Ultra chips use up to 79 percent less power than AMD's last-gen Ryzen 7840U while idling in Windows, and they're also up to 11 percent faster than AMD's hardware for multithreaded tasks. Intel, however, didn't have the upcoming Ryzen 8040 chips to test against. They use the company's new Intel 4 (7nm) process and should be the most efficient x86 processor for ultrathin systems."

As for AI workloads, Intel says Core Ultra chips can reach up to 34 TeraOPS when combining performance across the NPU, GPU and CPU. The big difference is the NPU: It'll enable features like Windows 11's Studio Effects, which can blur backgrounds and improve video lighting without hurting your battery life much. With more creative AI workloads, Intel says the Ultra 7 165H is 70 percent faster than the rival Ryzen 7 7840U in Adobe Premiere Pro.

Check out the rest of the specs and benchmark tests from Intel over here, and expect to hear more AI PC" bluster in 2024.

Oh, and nothing to do with Intel's chips, but be ready for everyone to be playing with AI-generated backgrounds on Instagram this week.

- Mat Smith

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