We have got our hands on the latest ASUS Zenbook S14 OLED with the Core Ultra 7 258V, and here's a detailed review for it!
Concrete is Earth’s second-most-used material behind water, creating about four times more CO2 emissions than planes. Some companies are trying to revolutionize the industry.
Fed cuts rates by 0.25% amid ongoing progress against inflation By Investing.com - Nov 07, 2024 24 Investing.com -- The Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 25 basis points on Thursday as ongoing ...
Investing.com - The U.S. dollar traded in tight ranges Thursday, as traders digested some mixed economic data ahead of the widely-watched payrolls report which closes out the week. At 05:35 ET (09 ...
What just happened? Intel launched its new Core Ultra 200 series "Arrow Lake" desktop CPUs earlier this week, and extreme overclockers are already pushing the chips to their limits. Renowned ...
Coming out on top in synthetic benchmark results puts the Core Ultra 9 285K at the top of the productivity pile, but the gaming situation hasn't changed much from the previous-gen Core i9-14900K ...
Researchers have created a graphene-enhanced, 3D-printable concrete that improves strength and reduces carbon emissions by 31%, advancing sustainable construction. Researchers from the University ...
However, while one saves a bit of money by not getting an AIO liquid cooler, there aren't many cheap Arrow Lake motherboards at the moment. Summarising the relative merits of the Core Ultra 5 245K ...
Now, it’s Intel’s turn to disappoint. I’ve been testing Intel’s $589 next-generation flagship Core Ultra 9 285K processor over the past week. It runs cooler and a little faster than Intel ...
Today marks the launch of Arrow Lake, the company’s latest architecture for desktop processors, formally sold as the Core Ultra 200S Series. According to Intel’s claims, this batch of Core ...
Intel specifically said that the Core Ultra 9 285K shows big gains in a ray-traced renderer like Cinebench, and sure enough, Geekbench 6 flattens the differences between the CPUs a bit.
For as long as I can remember, I've had love of all things tech, spurred on, in part, by a love of gaming. I began working on computers owned by immediate family members and relatives when I was ...