Tuesday, November 13, 2012


intel haswell is the next generation


That means it's running the benchmark at an incredibly smooth frame rate, while it's also running within the same power envelope as the Ivy Bridge machine. So you're not going to need any extra juice in your laptop to make with the graphical gaming goodness.
Perlmutter showed a second video, demonstrating how the Haswell architecture performs when the power levels are dropped to around 10W. At those levels you're getting the same sort of graphical performance, maybe even slightly better, as an Ivy Bridge machine running at nearly twice that Wattage.
While low power stuff is great, we love the fact that gaming performance is already looking so good ¨C and this is all before the Intel developer relations guys start helping the gaming crowd optimise their engines for Haswell.

"If we wanted to do six times the graphics performance we could do that now," he said. But he explained that's not the real point behind the efforts Intel has been making in power efficiency.
Being able to double the performance of its previous CPU graphics is still pretty impressive and being able to do that at the same power levels doubly so.
So we're not looking at Intel chasing down the discrete graphics crowd, the high-end and mid-range will remain the domain of the discrete desktop card. "People still build Maseratis and Ferraris, because some people demand that sort of power."
But in the gaming laptop market we could see Intel making some serious in-roads into that area, still scaring those discrete graphics guys.
The GT3E, the top-end Haswell graphics SKU, could result in all-Intel gaming laptops sticking it to the new generation of consoles as well as the other, discrete card-touting laptops next year.

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