It’s hardware season, and Intel is up to bat next. The company is hosting its next Intel Innovation event, and the focus at today’s event is expected to be on its next desktop processors, the 13th-gen Raptor Lake.
These highly anticipated new chips are the sequel to last year’s 12th-gen Alder Lake, which represented a massive sea change in the world of Intel chips. With the adoption of a higher core count, “hybrid” processors resulted in some impressive leads over the competition. But with AMD’s strong showing in Ryzen 7000, the pressure is back on Intel to deliver the performance needed to stay on top.
The event is going to touch on far more than just these new processors, though. With over 100 sessions slated for the two-day conference for developers and partners, the keynote is only the tip of the iceberg — but it’s the part that PC enthusiasts will be paying the most attention to. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is expected to kick off the presentation, which began at 9 a.m. PT and can be livestreamed from Intel’s website.
LiveLast updated September 27, 2022 10:12 AM
Linus Torvalds makes an appearance
Intel has brought up a special guest, Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel. Gelsginer has given him a signed copy of the book he wrote on x86 development, which Torvalds said was his way into developing Linux himself. Torvalds spoke about his upbringing and called himself a “plodding engineer,” rather than someone who has some grand vision for the future of open source technology. Gelsinger ended the segment by awarding Torvalds the first Intel Innovation award for his contribution to the open source community.
Samsung Display shows slidable display
The head of Samsung Display has been brought on stage to showcase the world’s first PC with a slidable display. Seeing that screen pull directly out was a pretty neat demo, even if it was just on a static image. The tablet is essentially turned from a 13-inch screen up to a 17-inch one, which looks pretty handy. The Samsung representative mentioned it as the next step forward in display innovation from folding displays, which are just now becoming available in some products.
13th-gen chip family has officially been announced
Finally, the moment we’ve been waiting for! Gelsinger has officially announced the 13th-gen Raptor Lake family of chips. The big features are enhanced E and P cores, which combine in this hybrid architecture to result in the best single-threaded and multi-threaded performance, according to Gelsinger. Up to 5.8GHz on the high-end chip, with even a 6GHz model previewed to launch in 2023.
Solving problems in game development
A developer from Inflexion Games has been brought on stage, to showcase how Intel’s hybrid architecture aids in development. The developer is working on the game, Nightingale, and has mentioned that often in game development, they can only have one instance of the game world open at once, but in this system they have on stage, up to four or even eight instances can be open at the same time, which the developer says can significantly speed up development.
Building AI models for the real world
Gelsinger and crew are demonstrating how building AI models can be applied to coffee harvesters, training a model to get better yields out of coffee beans. Gelsinger has announced Intel Getti to capitalize on getting the ability to create computer vision models out to more developers and industries. The next demo is Chipotle, and in this case, computer vision models are being shown to help restaurants stay stocked, keep ingredients fresh, and even ensuring order accuracy, all run by small form factor edge devices. Intel cameras are mounted above the service lines, and they can detect the ingredients in real-time. The CTO from Chipotle was shown in a video clipping, noting that a full deployment of the Intel technology is coming to a large market in the coming months.
Gelsinger throws shade at GPU pricing
Gelsinger has brought up a colleague on the stage to showcase her career, talk about Intel’s commitment an open ecosystem, and show some AI demos on 4th-gen Intel Xeon processors, but let’s just talk quickly about what the company is doing with the Arc A770. Gelsinger specifically mentioned how much people are complaining about the average price of GPUs today, and how Intel’s answer to that problem is the $329 A770. How these cards end up performing is still to be determined, but the messaging is clear: Intel wants to counter what Nvidia is doing with its sky-high graphics prices by launching its first gaming GPU as something the average PC gamer can actually afford.
Intel’s graphics get the spotlight
Conversation around graphics is up next. Gelsinger mentions that graphics has always been a passion of his, and now that he’s back, he wants to finish. He has announced the Intel Data Center GPU Flex, and held the product up for display. Next, Gelsinger showcased the Ponte Vecchio for high-powered supercomputers, and ended with the Arc A770 card for gamers. Gelsinger says reviews are already being shipped out to reviewers.
The Systems Foundry recipe, UCIe
Gelsinger is talking about everything that’s needed to drive forward the future of compute. In addition to the four major talking points, Gelsinger is touching on UCIe, the Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express, an open standard that all major foundries have agreed to. Short videos clips of Samsung and TSMC were shown, pledging their partnership in supporting UCIe.
Moore’s Law is alive and well
Gelsinger is speaking about the ubiquitous technological superpowers of the modern world, even using his own hearing aid that he pulled out of his ear as an example. He’s moving on to compute as the example of Intel’s contribution to this technology, proudly stating that Moore’s Law isn’t dead, as other companies have claimed. Gelsinger says Intel wants to be the stewards of Moore’s Law. Intel has put its roadmap of nodes on the screen to remind us of how aggressively the company is pushing ahead with nodes.
CEO Pat Gelsinger kicks things off
After a delightfully old-school introduction, CEO Pat Gelsinger has taken to the stage in front of the live audience. This is the first tech event that feels like the tech events of the old days, and it’s giving me the warm fuzzies of nostalgia.
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