![]() It looks just like the recent bevy of AMD-powered handhelds including the Asus RoG Ally.Ģ017 saw a triple-screen Razer laptop, while more prosaic concepts include new case and motherboard form factors, and new cooling technologies. As did the handheld gaming PC that Alienware showed off at CES 2020. But it certainly provided a glimpse of the future. Could you imagine such a thing?Īctually, back then it used DLP rear projection, so it was genuinely weird, even by today's standards. Back in 2008, Alienware wowed the world with a prototype curved PC monitor with an ultrawide 21:9 aspect. Of course, it wouldn't be CES without a few weird and whacky prototypes. If so, it'll be the same silicon running a little faster, not something actually new. Anyway, it's branded Ryzen 8000 series, which is a little misleading, but contains the same AI-accelerating NPU as existing Ryzen 7000 laptop APUs, allowing AMD to make that all-important AI pitch at CES.įinally, there's a tiny chance AMD may wheel out a refreshed version of its N31 GPU, as seen in the Radeon RX 7900 XT and XTX graphics cards, to address Nvidia's Super Series graphics. That's probably fine, because it's a great chip. Expect to see AMD flesh out further improvements to FSR 3 at CES.ĪMD will also be making an AI pitch courtesy of its new Hawk Point laptop chip, which is really just the excellent Phoenix chip already used in everything from laptops to gaming handhelds. ![]() So, there's more in- house work going on, too. Speaking of more polish, AMD has been announcing more games with FSR 3 support and the addition of variable refresh support for its fluid motion frame generation technology within FSR 3. You could argue what FSR really needs is more polish and work from AMD itself, not a load more games with slightly rough around the edges scaling support. Sorry for the repeat gag, but AMD has already announced that its FSR 3 upscaling tech is going open source, making it easier for anyone to add support, including community-based modders. Intel Meteor Lake's deep impactĪMD is rebooting its Phoenix APU for CES. They won't appear until at least the end of 2024 and maybe not until early 20225.Īs a final outside, could Nvidia begin talking about its rumoured ARM CPU for PCs at CES? 2024 is the year that we're expecting to see some serious movement on high performance ARM chips for PCs, so it's just about possible. Will they disappear? Or could they get a pricing haircut?Įither way, what you won't see is Nvidia's next-gen Blackwell GPUs, probably to be branded RTX 50-s Series. Perhaps just aas important is the question of what will happen to those existing GPUs. The RTX 4070 Super and RTX 4080 Super are thought to be smaller upgrades using the same silicon as existing non-Super GPUs. That's because it's rumoured to make the jump away from Nvidia's AD104 chip to the bigger AD103 GPU, the latter used by the RTX 4080, currently. Of those three, it's the RTX 4070 Ti Super that promises to be the biggest step forward. ![]() We've done the rumours to death, but we're expecting an RTX 4070 Super, and RTX 4070 Ti Super, and an RTX 4080 Super.
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