It’s hardware season and Intel is next. The company is hosting its next Intel Innovation Event and today’s event focused on the next generation of desktop processors, the 13th Gen Raptor Lake.
These highly anticipated new chips are the sequel to last year’s 12th Gen Alder Lake, which marked a massive change in the world of Intel chips. With the introduction of higher core counts, “hybrid” processors led to some impressive leads over the competition. But with AMD’s strong performance in Ryzen 7000, the pressure is back on Intel to deliver the performance needed to stay on top.
However, the event touched on far more than just these new processors. With over 100 sessions planned for the two-day developer and partner conference, the keynote is just the tip of the iceberg – but it’s the part that PC enthusiasts will pay the most attention to. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is expected to open the presentation, which began at 9:00 am PT and can still be live streamed from Intel’s website.
liveLast updated on September 27, 2022, 10:19 am
That’s it! Keynote is over
Intel Innovation’s opening keynote is over, but Gelsinger has already surfaced in the show’s wrap-up and spoke about the energy in the room and some of the main themes of the show. Gelsinger is such a well-known figure in the industry and his roots as a developer who started his career at Intel continue to be mentioned and highlighted as core to Intel’s new identity.
Enter Linus Torvalds
Intel has brought a special guest, Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel. Gelsginer gave him an autographed copy of the book he wrote on x86 development, which Torvalds said developing Linux himself was his way. Torvalds spoke about his upbringing, calling himself a “loafing engineer” rather than someone with a grand vision for the future of open source technology. Gelsinger ended the segment by presenting Torvalds with the first Intel Innovation Award for his contribution to the open source community.
Samsung display shows sliding display
The head of Samsung Display was brought onto the stage to present the world’s first PC with a sliding display. Seeing the screen pull right out was a pretty nice demo, even if it was just a static image. The tablet is essentially going from a 13-inch screen to a 17-inch, which looks pretty handy. The Samsung representative mentioned this as the next step forward in display innovation of folding displays, which are available in some products right now.
The 13th generation chip family has been officially announced
Finally the moment we’ve been waiting for! Gelsinger has officially announced the 13th generation Raptor Lake chip family. The big features are upgraded E and P cores, which Gelsinger says combine in this hybrid architecture to deliver the best single-threaded and multi-threaded performance. Up to 5.8 GHz on the high-end chip, even a 6 GHz model is expected to hit the market in 2023.
Solving problems in game development
A developer from Inflexion Games was brought on stage to show how Intel’s hybrid architecture supports development. The developer is working on the game Nightingale and has mentioned that in game development they can often only have one instance of the game world open at a time, but in this system they can have up to four or even eight instances on the stage open at the same time, which is noisy Developers can significantly speed up development.
Building AI models for the real world
Gelsinger and his crew demonstrate how AI modeling can be applied to coffee harvesters and train a model to get better yields from coffee beans. Gelsinger has announced that Intel Getti will benefit from giving more developers and industries the ability to create computer vision models. The next demo is Chipotle, and in this case, it will be showing computer vision models helping restaurants keep inventory levels, ingredients fresh, and even order accuracy, all run from small form factor Edge devices . Intel cameras are mounted above the service lines and can see the ingredients in real time. Chipotle’s CTO was featured in a video clip noting that a full deployment of Intel technology will hit a big market in the coming months.
Gelsinger casts shadows on GPU pricing
Gelsinger brought a colleague on stage to present her career, talk about Intel’s commitment to an open ecosystem and show some AI demos on 4th Gen Intel Xeon processors, but let’s briefly talk about what the company makes with the Arc A770. Gelsinger specifically mentioned how many people today complain about the average price of GPUs and that Intel’s answer to this problem is the $329 A770. How these cards will ultimately perform has yet to be determined, but the message is clear: Intel wants to counter what Nvidia is doing with its sky-high graphics prices by launching its first gaming GPU as something the average PC feels -Gamer can actually afford.
Intel’s graphics are in the spotlight
Next we will talk about graphics. Gelsinger mentions that graphics have always been a passion of his and now that he’s back he wants to finish. He announced the Intel Data Center GPU Flex and held up the product for presentation. Next, Gelsinger presented the Ponte Vecchio for powerful supercomputers and ended up with the Arc A770 card for gamers. Gelsinger says reviews are already being sent out to reviewers.
The Systems Foundry recipe, UCIe
Gelsinger talks about everything it takes to power the future of computing. In addition to the four main discussion points, Gelsinger addresses UCIe, the Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express, an open standard that all major foundries have agreed to. Short video clips were shown from Samsung and TSMC pledged their partnership in supporting UCIe.
Moore’s Law is alive and well
Gelsinger talks about the ubiquitous technological superpowers of the modern world, including using the example of his own hearing aid, which he pulled out of his ear. As an example of Intel’s contribution to this technology, he goes on to proudly point out that Moore’s Law is not dead as other companies have claimed. Gelsinger says Intel wants to be the guardians of Moore’s Law. Intel has brought its node roadmap to the screen to remind us how aggressively the company is moving forward with nodes.
CEO Pat Gelsinger starts things off
After a delightful old-school introduction, CEO Pat Gelsinger takes the stage in front of the live audience. This is the first tech event that feels like the tech events of the old days, and it fills me with nostalgic warmth.
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