Intel’s new Lunar Lake processor is here, and with it arrives renewed hope for the chipmaker in the battle against surging competition from Qualcomm and its Snapdragon X CPUs. Qualcomm stole Intel's thunder when its chips powered all the new Copilot+ PCs that launched earlier this year, but now it's Intel's turn to show what it's made of.
Formally known as the Core Ultra Series 2 of CPUs, the new chip generation makes some major architectural changes under the hood that will fundamentally alter the design of Intel laptops for better and for worse. What that means for anyone buying a Windows laptop foremost is that you have an even more confusing landscape to navigate.
Series 2
What’s different about the Core Ultra Series 2 versus its predecessors? Perhaps the biggest relates to memory: RAM is now part of the CPU package and not a separate component on the motherboard. While this can make for faster memory operations, it also means you’ll need to select your RAM configuration when you buy your computer, and there won’t be any way to upgrade it later (very much like Apple's MacBooks).
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