Tuesday, December 24th 2024

Intel Confirms CES 2025 Keynote, Teases "AI Inside" Era and Core Ultra 200H/HX/S CPUs

Intel has officially announced its presence at CES 2025, teasing what appears to be a significant focus on AI capabilities in its upcoming processor lineup. The tech giant shared a preview image featuring their tagline "AI Inside for a New Era." The announcement suggests that the company will be showcasing new developments in AI processing capabilities integrated directly into their consumer processors. Intel's upcoming lineup is expected to feature the mobile-focused "Arrow Lake" Core Ultra 200H/HX processors alongside the Arrow Lake-based Core Ultra 200S series designed for desktop systems with 35 W and 65 W power configurations. The company is also supposedly introducing new mid-range and workstation-class 800-series processors for desktop platforms.

The "AI Inside" messaging indicates that Intel is positioning itself to compete more aggressively in the AI computing space, particularly as PCs increasingly handle AI workloads locally. While specific details about the presentation remain under wraps, we can anticipate announcements regarding new Arrow Lake configurations, enhanced AI capabilities, and possibly new partnerships or software ecosystems designed to leverage these features. The keynote could also shed light on Intel's strategy for maintaining competitiveness in an increasingly AI-focused computing landscape. Michelle Johnston Holthaus, interim co-CEO, and Jack Weast, an Intel Fellow and VP of Intel Automotive, will deliver the live keynote. Intel's agenda also shows next-generation AI silicon so we can get information on accelerators like Falcon Shores.
Source: Intel
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8 Comments on Intel Confirms CES 2025 Keynote, Teases "AI Inside" Era and Core Ultra 200H/HX/S CPUs

#1
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
The push for ai, leads to internet connection hogging...
Posted on Reply
#2
Darmok N Jalad
We’re already “AI weary” and everyone is doubling down. I’ve yet to see much actual excitement around consumer-grade AI. I guess somewhat smarter voice recognition is okay, but we still see examples of AI incorrectly interpreting and summarizing text, like news articles. Our current corporate culture of beta testing on customers is doing nothing for user confidence in new features.
Posted on Reply
#3
ScaLibBDP
Darmok N JaladWe’re already “AI weary” and everyone is doubling down. I’ve yet to see much actual excitement around consumer-grade AI. I guess somewhat smarter voice recognition is okay, but we still see examples of AI incorrectly interpreting and summarizing text, like news articles. Our current corporate culture of beta testing on customers is doing nothing for user confidence in new features.
>>...AI incorrectly interpreting and summarizing text, like news articles...

I've recently came across a web-page, generated by AI, that summarized technical specs of a small amateur telescope. That was a complete "crap" of inaccuracies, mistakes, etc!

Watch out for more "crap" on Wikipedia!
Posted on Reply
#4
phanbuey

Extreme Ultra Edition Inside.
Posted on Reply
#5
theouto
Don't worry intel, I already wasn't going to buy your cpus, no need to spend money on hardware that enables cronically flawed and unreliable software that I have seen fuck up many times.

Recently someone in university cheated in the middle of the exam with chatGPT, it was a simple thing that we had to do really, so simple you could do it in under 5 minutes, and chatGPT got it wrong, so my classmate got it wrong, quite amusing.
Posted on Reply
#6
Darmok N Jalad
ScaLibBDP>>...AI incorrectly interpreting and summarizing text, like news articles...

I've recently came across a web-page, generated by AI, that summarized technical specs of a small amateur telescope. That was a complete "crap" of inaccuracies, mistakes, etc!

Watch out for more "crap" on Wikipedia!
It’s something I don’t use (summarize with AI), but maybe I should for a laugh. I mean, if the article was written with AI, and then gets summarized by AI, that makes it a copy of a copy, which is never as accurate, right? (see the movie Multiplicity)
Posted on Reply
#7
Vayra86
I think AI is the one subject that allow us to coin the term

'Collective Facepalm'

Basically that's beyond the epic triple facepalm, and its when almost all consumers do it in sync.
Posted on Reply
#8
Sabotaged_Enigma
Intel Inside logo was famous, and that really was their era.
But now, AI Inside... Intel, are you sure it's yours?
Posted on Reply
Dec 25th, 2024 10:47 EST change timezone

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