There’s excellent news for mobile gamers, but there’s less good news for those who want a desktop with the new Intel Arc: If the mobile version comes to market on time, it looks like the desktop versions are late.
So, along with the 12th generation Intel Alder Lakes, Intel Arc capable of ray tracing, grid shading and variable shading, as well as ultra sampling, is still on the market this quarter. Desktop versions of these promising graphics cards from Intel arrive only somewhat later, in the second quarter instead of the previously announced first. However, workstation releases arrive in the third quarter.
Intel pins high hopes on the first generation of Alchemist GPUs and expects to sell more than 4 million this year alone, and is already working on the third generation codenamed cyanTogether with the second generation mage battlenames that do not fail to show the player’s attitude to these graphics in general, the market is waiting for these GPUs with great anticipation, after a few decades when Intel graphics did not mean much in terms of performance.
With Intel itself challenged on processors by AMD, which is now seriously competing with Nvidia, the launch of the first discrete graphics cards with true capacity to assert themselves is an event that all enthusiasts have been waiting for. However, the plans go beyond just the availability of these graphics in mobile devices and laptops. according to The ultimate toolThe project game over Cloud computing will offer low latency access to the GPU Arc, sometime in the near future, but it hasn’t been revealed yet.
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