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During a January 31 Earnings Call, Cristiano Renno Amon (President and CEO of Qualcomm) discussed the upcoming launch of his company's Snapdragon X Elite processor—an ARM-based SoC that is built "for AI" on next generation tablets, notebooks and ultra-slim laptops. The twelve onboard custom Oryon cores are part of a package that will become (in marketing terms): "the most powerful, intelligent, and efficient processor ever created for Windows in its class. With cutting edge responsiveness, navigate demanding multi-tasking workloads across productivity, creativity, immersive entertainment, and more..." Amon and his executive colleagues are targeting a middle-of-2024 launch of Snapdragon X Elite-powered devices, he also mentioned a next-gen version of Microsoft's operating system in the same sentence: "We're tracking to the launch of products with this chipset tied with the next version of Microsoft Windows that has a lot of the Windows AI capabilities. We're still maintaining the same date, which is driven by Windows, which is mid-2024, getting ready for back-to-school."
The rumor mill has "Windows 12" marked down for a summer 2024 launch period—last December, Taiwan's Commercial Times reported on a number sources within the PC manufacturing industry—alluding to a June release date. Intel Chief Financial Officer Dave Zinsner relayed a similar schedule to a Citi interviewer (reported by PC Gamer): "We actually think '24 is going to be a pretty good year for client, in particular, because of the Windows refresh. And we still think that the installed base is pretty old and does require a refresh and we think next year may be the start of that, given the Windows catalyst. So we're optimistic about how things will play out beginning in '24."
Windows Central contacted inside sources regarding Microsoft's upcoming "Windows Refresh"—they believe that the OS product codenamed "Hudson Valley" will roll out in two waves. The first output could be a "Windows Germanium platform release shipping on new Snapdragon X Elite hardware. This update won't be made available as an OTA for existing PCs, as that's not scheduled to take place until September or October once the Hudson Valley update is finalized. While the June launch window will include some next-gen capabilities, most of the end-user facing features won't appear until the Hudson Valley update is ready, which will ship as an OTA on top of the Germanium platform release in September or October."
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
The rumor mill has "Windows 12" marked down for a summer 2024 launch period—last December, Taiwan's Commercial Times reported on a number sources within the PC manufacturing industry—alluding to a June release date. Intel Chief Financial Officer Dave Zinsner relayed a similar schedule to a Citi interviewer (reported by PC Gamer): "We actually think '24 is going to be a pretty good year for client, in particular, because of the Windows refresh. And we still think that the installed base is pretty old and does require a refresh and we think next year may be the start of that, given the Windows catalyst. So we're optimistic about how things will play out beginning in '24."
Windows Central contacted inside sources regarding Microsoft's upcoming "Windows Refresh"—they believe that the OS product codenamed "Hudson Valley" will roll out in two waves. The first output could be a "Windows Germanium platform release shipping on new Snapdragon X Elite hardware. This update won't be made available as an OTA for existing PCs, as that's not scheduled to take place until September or October once the Hudson Valley update is finalized. While the June launch window will include some next-gen capabilities, most of the end-user facing features won't appear until the Hudson Valley update is ready, which will ship as an OTA on top of the Germanium platform release in September or October."
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source