The Intel Core Ultra 9 285K and Core Ultra 5 245K are decent enough processors, but gaming performance takes a backseat.
GHz overclock is an incredible achievement, without a doubt – but that won’t help Arrow Lake’s lukewarm reception.
Intel’s Core Ultra 9 285K is the first enthusiast desktop CPU with a built-in NPU, or a neural processing unit, for ...
Intel's Core Ultra 9 285K is an undeniably impressive CPU, but it's still tough to recommend given some inconsistent ...
Today intel has lifted the lid on performance numbers for its new Core Ultra 200 'Arrow Lake' desktop processors and everyone ...
Intel is allowing reviews to lift the lid on the performance of its new Core Ultra processors today and below you can see ...
Officially, Intel recommends an MSRP between $309 and $319, with the first Core Ultra 5 245K listing selling for $328.99 at ...
Reviews are now live and performance is all over the place Intel's Arrow Lake-S desktop processors have become available, ...
Coming out on top in synthetic benchmark results puts the Core Ultra 9 285K at the top of the productivity pile, but the ...
Checked our review of the Intel Core Ultra 5 and looking for something a little more potent? The Intel Core Ultra 7 265K is a ...
Cores (P+E): 8+16 Threads: 24 Base clock: 3.7 GHz (P-core) Boost clock: 5.7 GHz (P-core) L3 Cache: 40 MB L2 Cache: 36 MB ...
Intel's Arrow Lake-based Core Ultra 200S series processors for high-performance desktop systems have arrived and we've taken ...