![]() Specialized content-creation/media-processing laptops, as well as gaming machines, need beefy GPUs-beefier than what the GeForce MX line traditionally serves up. It aims for the same general discrete-GPU target as Nvidia’s low-end GeForce MX graphics solution, and those chips don’t show up in all that many laptops, relative to those with either integrated (on-CPU) graphics or higher-end discrete graphics. We saw plenty of information about Iris Xe Max, but to set the stage, know that it may not end up coming to loads of laptops in practice, at least at the beginning. (Expect them as 2020 draws to a close.) We have a general overview of Iris Xe Max with more details here, but I’ve gathered some of the most important points-and more so, what I see as the implications of Xe Max-for you here. The solution, named Iris Xe Max, will make its way into a few 11th Generation “Tiger Lake”-based laptops first. ![]() Would it be for desktops? Laptops? Gamers or business go-getters? This week, the chip giant provided PCMag with the details in a private briefing. Rumors have been flying and trickles of official info seeping out, for a while now, about Intel’s first discrete graphics processor. ![]()
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