laitimes

Intel showed off arc sharp graphics card or NUC mini machine: XeSS game run

In addition to announcing the Arc Sharp Graphics card roadmap, Intel today also showed off a NUC mini machine with Arc graphics for the first time.

The mini machine that Everyone is familiar with Raja Koduri is not new, but the existing "Beast Canyon" (Beast Canyon), also known as NUC 11 Extreme, originally based on the 11th generation Core, is the first TO support full-length, dual-slot graphics card NUC, even RTX 3090 as long as the volume can also be tucked in.

Intel replaced it with an Arc sharp, and the replaceable front panel became the Arc LOGO. Of course, the internal situation is unlikely for us to see.

The demonstration session ran "Tomb Raider" and turned on XeSS super resolution technology. Frame rate performance? Of course not in public.

Intel showed off arc sharp graphics card or NUC mini machine: XeSS game run
Intel showed off arc sharp graphics card or NUC mini machine: XeSS game run

Beast Canyon and replaceable graphics card

Intel is preparing several new NUCs based on Arc's sharp graphics cards, including the NUC 12 Extreme, code-named "Dragon Canyon", as well as the Serpent Canyon NUC 12 and King County NUC X15.

Intel showed off arc sharp graphics card or NUC mini machine: XeSS game run

The first generation of Intel Arc graphics cards, Alchemy, has more than 50 product designs, including notebooks shipped in the first quarter, desktop discrete graphics cards released in the second quarter, workstation graphics cards in the third quarter to keep up, this year to ship 4 million units, generating nearly $1 billion in revenue.

The third generation of Celestial R&D has officially started and will enter the super enthusiast field for the first time, and the revenue of Intel's GPU business is expected to be close to $10 billion by 2026.

Intel showed off arc sharp graphics card or NUC mini machine: XeSS game run

Read on