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- Hey guys, this is Austin.
If you love laptops, I have some good news for you.
Intel recently invited me out
to their event in San Francisco
where they showed off a wide range of new chips,
including not only Intel processors
that have built-in AMD dedicated graphics,
but we're also going to be getting new laptop chips
across the board,
including a brand new six-core Core i9 option for laptops.
So, let's start with the very first Intel processor
that has dedicated AMD graphics
that are actually built inside the chip
or by its short name
of the 8th Generation Intel Core Processors
with Radeon RX Vega Graphics,
because, you know, that rolls off the tongue.
So the CPU side of things isn't all that exciting.
You're getting a quad-core Kaby Lake base CPU
that lives on the Core i7, can boost up to 4.2 gigahertz.
What really makes this special
is the idea that you're getting
a pretty much dedicated Radeon graphics card
that's actually going to be paired inside that same chip,
so this is going to be a custom Vega implementation
with between 20 or 24 CUs
depending on if you go with Core i5 or Core i7.
They had a couple laptops available to demo.
The HP Spectre x360, which looks very similar
to the ENVY x360 we recently took a look at
running Ryzen Mobile, as well as the Dell XPS 15 2-in-1.
Now, these are fairly thin and light laptops.
Now, they do have 15-inch displays.
When you consider that they have the CPU
and the GPU all inside a 65-watt TDP,
they don't have to be all that thick
and they don't need to have any kind of crazy cooling.
It's all going to be on one chip,
which means that for a lot of these things,
they can actually be pretty close to Ultrabooks.
Of course, being much, much powerful.
Now, we'll have to wait until I actually get
one of these laptops and to test,
but if you do want a sneak peek at the performance,
I recently did do a video on the new Hades Canyon Intel NUC,
which was going to be a little bit more powerful,
does have that same chip inside.
There were ton of other processors announced as well.
So, on the mainstream side,
the U-Series processors that go in a ton of Ultrabooks
are going to be getting Iris Plus Graphics.
So, while these are going to be almost definitely found
in things like the next-generation 13-inch MacBook,
it's going to be really nice to be able to have
a fairly thin and small laptop
that can have, not only quad-core processors,
but also pretty decent integrated graphics.
Nothing crazy,
certainly not going to touch the Radeon stuff,
but it should be a nice step forward.
What's really exciting though
are the brand new gaming laptops chips.
So, these are the H-Series processors
and at 45 watts, it's what you find
in pretty much any gaming laptop,
as well as some workstations.
So, there's a big change across the board.
First of all, the Core i5's are basically being bumped up
to what you used to be able to get as a Core i7.
So they're still going to be quad-core
but they now have hyperthreading.
So, if you have a older generation Core i7,
the low-ends now is going to be roughly equivalent.
The real sweet spot though
are going to be the brand new 8th Generation Core i7's,
which just like the desktop,
are moving from four cores to six cores.
And yes, having six cores in a gaming laptop
is going to be awesome, especially concerning
that they keep that same 45-watt TDP.
It's literally just more free performance.
The only little place you lost out here is with clock speed.
So with the base Core i7-8750H,
when you're completely maxing it out with all six cores,
the base clock is only going to be 2.2 gigahertz.
However, it can't boost all the way up to 4.2 gigahertz,
so that will be a lot closer to that for the most part.
If you step up to the higher end Core i7-8850H,
these numbers are a lot,
that guy's going to be able to run at 2.6 gigahertz base
or 4.3 gigahertz boost.
On top of that, that 8850H
does have some slight overclocking capabilities,
so depending on whether the laptop OEM
will actually allow you to do it or not,
it can, in theory, be boosted by another 400 megahertz.
What I'm really excited to get my hands on though
is that brand new Intel Core i9 laptop chip.
So this essentially builds on what you're getting
on the Core i7 with the six-core design,
but cranks up everything to 11.
The i9-8950HK has that same
six-core hyperthreading design as the i7.
However, it bumps up the clock speeds to 2.9 gigahertz base
and especially with their new velocity boost,
which will allow an even higher turbo clock,
assuming that you're going to be
fairly cool on the processor,
you can get up to 4.8 gigahertz out of the Core i9.
Even better is that's going to be overclockable.
So, I feel like it's going to be only a matter of time
before we start seeing laptops
with a six-core five-gigahertz-plus processor.
Intel had a few of these Core i9 systems set up
and to be fair, they're all very, very thick.
A lot of that is because they all had a GTX 1080 inside,
which as you will probably know
is not exactly going to be the easiest thing to cool.
However, you don't actually need dual power supplies
for the Core i9 as it is still going to be a 45-watt chip,
at least until you start overclocking.
All these processors should be going on sale pretty shortly
but I've got to say,
I am really excited for the new i7's and i9's.
Having six-cores in a laptop
is going to be a legit game changer.
But I'm curious, which of these processors
do you think will make it into your next laptop?
Let me know in the comments below
and I will catch you in the next one.