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What performance boost will Intel’s next chips deliver?

“Do you want more power-efficiency or CPU horsepower with your next PC chip?” Agam Shah reports for IDG News Service. “The merits of each have propelled an interesting debate among those who want more performance or longer battery life in their PCs. But raw CPU performance drives the ongoing rivalry between AMD and Intel.”

“Intel wants to continue to deliver 10 to 20 percent performance improvements with chips based on the upcoming 10-nanometer and 7-nanometer manufacturing processes, company CEO Brian Krzanich said this week,” Shah reports.

“Some critics may deem those numbers to be incremental, which is why AMD’s upcoming Zen PC chip is getting attention. The chip will deliver 40 percent improvement in instructions-per-cycle, a metric related to CPU performance. Chip makers haven’t historically seen the big performance boost coming in Zen, AMD’s Chief Technology Officer Mark Papermaster has said,” Shah reports. “But Intel has different goals, with a larger focus on increasing battery life in laptops and keeping PCs affordable.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Different chips for different needs. We look forward to seeing how Intel’s first 10-nm chips (Cannonlake) perform when they are released (scheduled for second half of 2017).

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