No APO on Raptor/Alder Lake Refresh, confirms Intel A new video from HardwareUnboxed explains the good and bad things about APO technology. The 14th Gen Core desktop series known as Raptor Lake Refresh featured this technology as one of the biggest additions. But the original Raptor Lake series, not to mention Alder Lake, is not […]
This seems like one of those (Intel) technologies that will require mass adoption by developers in order to gain momentum. Otherwise AMD will swoop in with their (much better) version of it. At that point either AMD’s will survive and Intel will eventually be forced to adopt it or (more likely) neither will survive.
I think we all agree that competition is a good thing in the industry, but sometimes if you do not make your new feature as easy and appealing as possible for devs to support, they’re just not going to bother.
AMDs better version of it with their ecores what?
This software utilizes the hybrid architecture.
Amd actually kinda has ecores now with their low cache chiplets for compute density. There is also the hybrid ones with x3d, so I guess 3 tiers of cache performance.