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Chrome-based browsers do not work well on PCs with Alder Lake processors. Intel came up with several solutions

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Some PCs built on 12th generation Intel Core Alder Lake processors have started to experience problems with browsers based on the Chromium engine. As it turned out, Edge and Chrome browsers “slow down” on these systems.

Chrome-based browsers do not work well on PCs with Alder Lake processors.  Intel came up with several solutions

According to users, scrolling in browsers is intermittent and delayed by 1-2 seconds. The corporation has already recognized the problem and offered several solutions at once. The cause of the failure, Intel called problems with the drivers for the integrated graphics UHD Graphics 770.

The company advised updating browsers to the latest version, installing the latest builds of Intel graphics drivers, and disabling hardware acceleration in the web browsers themselves, because it uses the power of the video card to reduce the load on the central processor.

Another option is to use an SSD as a system disk, since it is to it that a large number of requests go, which is why the browser starts to “slow down”.

Apparently, the problem only occurs on systems with Alder Lake processors, and only on those that use only integrated graphics. The appearance of a ready-made solution in the form of an updated driver has not yet been reported.

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Almost $5,000 for an Nvidia video card with a 256-bit bus, but 32 GB of memory. RTX 5000 Ada appeared in retail

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Almost 5000 for an Nvidia video card with a 256 bit

Nvidia has launched the RTX 5000 Ada graphics adapter. This is a professional solution that should not be confused with the regular RTX 5000, since the latter is a previous generation model.

Almost $5,000 for an Nvidia video card with a 256-bit bus, but 32 GB of memory.  RTX 5000 Ada appeared in retail

The RTX 5000 Ada has been available for about a month now, but previously it could only be purchased as part of ready-made workstations. Now it has appeared in retail, although so far, apparently, only in China.

There they ask for about $4,800 for a new product. This is about half the price of the RTX 6000 Ada, but the parameters of the younger model are simpler. The card offers an AD102 GPU, but with only 12,800 active CUDA cores. At the same time, the new product has 32 GB of memory, but a 256-bit bus. Performance (FP32) is 65.3 TFLOPS with a TDP of only 250 W.

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Neither in Blender nor in V-Ray can the new Core i9-14900K outperform the “old” Ryzen 9 7950X

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Neither in Blender nor in V Ray can the new Core

The results of testing the Core i9-14900K processor in tasks that can actually load modern multi-core processors have appeared on the Internet.

Neither in Blender nor in V-Ray can the new Core i9-14900K outperform the “old” Ryzen 9 7950X

In Blender, the new product scores almost 560 points, which is 6% more than the Core i9-13900KS. This is good considering that these are technically identical CPUs. The new product is already 8% ahead of its direct predecessor, the Core i9-13900K. However, the Ryzen 9 7950X is still a little faster.

In V-Ray, the new Intel flagship showed a result of 27,790 points, ahead of the Core i9-13900KS by 5% and its predecessor by 8%. But here again the AMD flagship is ahead.

Neither in Blender nor in V-Ray can the new Core i9-14900K outperform the “old” Ryzen 9 7950X

Neither in Blender nor in V-Ray can the new Core i9-14900K outperform the “old” Ryzen 9 7950X

Of course, it was clear in advance that Raptor Lake Refresh would only be a very minor update (except for the Core i7, which will get more cores), but now we can verify this not only through the results from Geekbench.

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The Ryzen 8000 and Ryzen 9000 processors will offer more cores than their predecessors. AMD roadmap describing Zen 5 and Zen 6 leaked online

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The Ryzen 8000 and Ryzen 9000 processors will offer more

An AMD roadmap has leaked online, describing a number of key features of the company’s future products. It was obtained by the author of the Moore’s Law Is Dead channel.

The Ryzen 8000 and Ryzen 9000 processors will offer more cores than their predecessors.  AMD roadmap describing Zen 5 and Zen 6 leaked online

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The document, among other things, describes the Zen 5 and Zen 6 architectures.

The Ryzen 8000 and Ryzen 9000 processors will offer more cores than their predecessors.  AMD roadmap describing Zen 5 and Zen 6 leaked online

The Ryzen 8000 and Ryzen 9000 processors will offer more cores than their predecessors.  AMD roadmap describing Zen 5 and Zen 6 leaked online

The first to hit the market, of course, will be Zen 5, codenamed Nirvana. The first CPUs based on it are expected in the first half of 2024. Processors with Zen 5 architecture will be produced using 3 and 4 nm technical processes and will bring an increase in IPC (the number of instructions executed per clock cycle) by 10-15%. It is also known that the data cache of Zen 5 will be increased to 48 KB, a new low-power core version will appear, and Zen 5 will also bring a 16-core cluster. Probably, only Zen 5c cores will be combined with 16 pieces, but this still means that the total number of cores in the new processors will increase and finally exceed the 16 pieces mark that we have become accustomed to since the Ryzen 3000.

Zen 6, codenamed Morpheus, is expected to move to 3nm and 2nm process technology and will be released sometime in 2025. The IPC indicator will increase by 10%, that is, not as much as in recent years. But the architecture will bring support for FP16 computing to accelerate AI/ML algorithms and a new memory profiler. Moreover, processor clusters will be able to have 32 cores each, which means that we will again see an increase in the number of cores in the CPU as a whole.

Moore’s Law Is Dead profiled many AMD products before they were released. In particular, the Radeon RX 7800 and Radeon RX 7700 video cards several months before the announcement.

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