News Intel shows off working Panther Lake systems at CES — Celestial Xe GPU cores power Intel sneak peek

I like the buzz on Panther Lake, but not available on the street until 2026?
And that's God willing and the crick don't rise.
Well, just have to see.
And I'd prefer a desktop, but maybe a laptop with a good docking station ...
 
I imagine there will be more displays and examples like this over this year than any prior generation. So much is riding on the success of 18A that Intel likely feels the need to show every piece of progress along the way.
 
Now that nVidia has proof of concept that AI can do 94% of frame generation and IF Panther lake can further demonstrate great performance with a single CPU/GPU/NPU package, I think we can kiss separate GPU cards goodbye.
 
Now that nVidia has proof of concept that AI can do 94% of frame generation and IF Panther lake can further demonstrate great performance with a single CPU/GPU/NPU package, I think we can kiss separate GPU cards goodbye.
And how many TOPS do you think frame generation requires? And rasterization still takes a big ol' chunk of GPU silicon. And don't even get started with professional video, CAD/CAM, Viz, rendering etc..
Pro video workstations use 2 or 3 top end RTX or RTX X000 cards.
Kiss discrete GPU cards goodby?
Hahaha hahaha hahaha.
Dream on matey
 
And how many TOPS do you think frame generation requires? And rasterization still takes a big ol' chunk of GPU silicon. And don't even get started with professional video, CAD/CAM, Viz, rendering etc..
Pro video workstations use 2 or 3 top end RTX or RTX X000 cards.
Kiss discrete GPU cards goodby?
Hahaha hahaha hahaha.
Dream on matey
Well, I kind of feel like all of this will be in a smartphone in 10-20 years anyway, so yes lol.