Tom's Hardware on MSN
Nvidia CEO confirms Vera Rubin NVL72 is now in production — Jensen Huang uses CES keynote to announce the milestone
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced during his keynote speech at CES that Vera Rubin NVL72 is now officially in production. The ...
AMD’s next-generation Zen 6 CPU architecture has quietly made its first appearance through an internal developer document, ...
Vietnam Investment Review on MSN
Supermicro supports new NVIDIA AI platforms expands liquid cooling manufacturing
The server maker is preparing for next-generation AI hardware with expanded production for advanced cooling solutions.
Having an annual cadence for the improvement of AI systems is a great thing if you happen to be buying the newest iron at ...
PCMag on MSN
Intel's 'Panther Lake' Core Ultra Laptop Chips Are Ready for Prime Time: All the Details We Know So Far
At CES, Intel details its launch lineup for the new Core Ultra Series 3 processors (based on its 2nm 18A architecture) that ...
PCMag Australia on MSN
AMD Unleashes Ryzen AI 400 Series: 60 TOPS of AI Power Hits Laptops and Mini PCs
The new Ryzen AI 400 series packs Zen 5 cores, RDNA 3.5 graphics, and XDNA 2 NPUs, promising faster AI performance and ...
Maxon introduces Cinebench 2026, the latest benchmark with support for Nvidia Blackwell and AMD Radeon 9000 GPUs, Apple M4/M5 ...
As promised, Intel has launched the Core Ultra Series 3 processors at CES 2026. These are the long-awaited "Panther Lake" ...
Tom's Hardware on MSN
AMD publishes first Zen 6 document detailing ground-up redesign on 2nm process node — brand-new 8-wide CPU core with strong vector capabilities
AMD's Zen 6-based CPUs may be number crunching monsters, given their core design that is partially revealed in a performance counters document.
A new render engine for Cinebench 2026 comes complete with wider support for CPUs and GPUs, as well as new features.
Maxon’s Cinebench 2026 updates CPU and GPU benchmarking with new SMT tests and Redshift-based scenes, now supporting Nvidia Blackwell, AMD 9000, and Apple M5.
Intel has been building chips designed for gaming PCs for years but the company is now moving into handheld devices too.
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