Enter your username and password.
Tip your editors:
Editorial Director:
Brian Lam | | Twitter
Editor:
Jason Chen
| AIM | Twitter
Features Editor:
Wilson Rothman
| Twitter
Senior Contributing Editors:
Jesus Diaz
| AIM | Twitter
Mark Wilson, Reviews
| AIM | Twitter
Contributing Editors:
Matt Buchanan
| AIM | Twitter
Adam Frucci
| Twitter
Sean Fallon
| Twitter
Jack Loftus
| Twitter
John Herrman
| Twitter
Dan Nosowitz
Chris Mascari
Kat Hannaford
| Twitter
Rosa Golijan
| Twitter
Chris Jacob
Columnist:
Brendan I. Koerner
Interns:
Don Nguyen
Kyle VanHemert
Comment Account Questions:
Please enter your email address to have your password reset.
Registering will give you a user profile and the ability to add other users as friends. To become a commenter, however, you need to audition.
Want to know more? Consult the Comment FAQ and legal terms.
You don't need to login to comment. Just enter your email address below.
See how your address will be displayed in the Comment FAQ.
Nvidia's Nforce Chipset Is Dead in the Water
Roadmap for Intel's First Nehalem-Based Mobile Chips Leaked
Details for Intel's new quad- and dual-core i7 and i5 chips have leaked in the form of a roadmap, so we've got some excellent specifics, including release dates and prices. More »Six-Core Nehalem Processors Might Arrive This Year
According to bit-tech, , Intel is planning to release a six-core Nehalem processor sometime this year. More »Manufacturers Mercilessly Cram Intel i7 Nehalem Processors Into Laptops
Big Mac Tuesday: What Apple Dropped
Today Apple performed serious internal upgrades on the iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Pro and Time Capsule, and they did it without a keynote—or even a press-release quote from His Jobsness. Here's a recap: More »AMD Phenom II Quad Core Reviewed: Great Today, But Tomorrow's Cloudy
Ars reviews AMD's latest quad-core, the Phenom II, against a barrage of Intel chips and finds that while it "puts AMD back on the map" against today's chips, AMD's got a "long-term problem." [Ars Technica]Notebook Makers Want Intel to Delay Superfast Nehalem Mobile Chips
Here's another severe warping of the spacetime continuum caused by the financiapocalypse: Notebook makers want Intel to delay its crazyfast Nehalem-based mobile CPUs and chipsets. In other words, they want notebooks to be slower, longer. More »Intel's Core i7 Chips Get Prodded, Poked and Compared: Good, But Expensive
Intel's Six-Core Xeon 7400 "Dunnington" Processor Shipping on September 15th
Intel Spills More Beans on Nehalem Microarchitecture at IDF
Intel Nehalem Chip Moniker Begets "Core i7" Branding
Next-Gen Intel Notebook Platform "Calpella" Details
Crazy Fast Intel Bloomfield Processor Getting Early September Release
Intel and Nvidia At War, Gamers Are Collateral Damage
Intel's Six-Core Dunnington and Nehalem Microarchitecture Get Official
Intel's 6-Core Nehalem and Xeon Dunnington Processors Leaked
This is fascinating if you're planning on getting a new computer soon or if you're a gigantic spec nerd, but Sun just spilled the beans on Intel's upcoming processor lineup in the form of a leaked roadmap. In it, you can see that there's two six-core processors, one Xeon Dunnington and one Nehalem. More »Intel Planning 6-Core "Dunnington" Microprocessor