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Intel will drop the Meteor Lake laptops for its Intel Core Ultra series and name the Raptor Lake S and HX 14 Gen


Intel will drop the Meteor Lake laptops for its Intel Core Ultra series and name the Raptor Lake S and HX 14 Gen



Just yesterday we knew the big news what will it bring Intel with its next generation of processors. This time it is not about technology included in the Intel Meteor Lakebut a new system for naming your processorss, which includes novelties in the numbering of the processors and which has a new range of processors called Ultra. Recently known this news, it is also known what Intel will do with the Upcoming Raptor Lake Refresh for desktops that will be released as 14 Gen.

Geeknetic Intel will drop Meteor Lake laptops for its Intel Core Ultra series and name 14 Gen the Raptor Lake S and HX 1
Images of IT Home

According to the slide that we can see in IT Homeit seems that Intel will leave the Raptor Lake U as processors belonging to the new intel corewhile the new Intel Meteor Lake will correspond to the Intel Core Ultra. What is not clear is how Intel will classify desktop processors in the absence of a Meteor Lake-S, since we have also seen that the Raptor Lake HX and Raptor Lake S Refresh will become part of the 14 Genbut keeping the old nomenclature core i.

Geeknetic Intel will drop Meteor Lake laptops for its Intel Core Ultra series and name the Raptor Lake S and HX 2 14 Gen
Images of IT Home

In this way, it seems that the new Intel Core Ultra they will be formed only by the Intel Meteor Lake and intended for portable equipment. Intel will leave the novelties, such as a new AI module and L4 cache, in Intel Core Ultra laptop processors, formed by the new Intel Meteor Lake, and will leave the current generation renaming it to 14 gen for the rest of his series, though we hope they include news like higher clock speed and maybe larger L2 cache.

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Article Editor: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I gutted my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles that I write at Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, contemporary and retro, on the 20+ consoles I own, in addition to the PC.

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