64 bit Windows, 2GB of RAM!
Wouldn't want it to cannibalize notebook sales...
64 bit Windows, 2GB of RAM!
Well at the high end Bay Trail Z3795 already is 1.6-2.4GHz and all other 1.5-2.4GHz, or at the lowed end 1.3-1.8/2.2GHz. So the frequency change is definitely not that high. But as I already wrote, it's not what matters; the question is how long can these new 14nm chips run at higher frequencies.Well, base clock is faster, that important because thats the clock they gona run at when the igp is in use, the bad thing is, its not by much.
Well at the high end Bay Trail Z3795 already is 1.6-2.4GHz and all other 1.5-2.4GHz, or at the lowed end 1.3-1.8/2.2GHz. So the frequency change is definitely not that high. But as I already wrote, it's not what matters; the question is how long can these new 14nm chips run at higher frequencies.
Well at the high end Bay Trail Z3795 already is 1.6-2.4GHz and all other 1.5-2.4GHz, or at the lowed end 1.3-1.8/2.2GHz. So the frequency change is definitely not that high. But as I already wrote, it's not what matters; the question is how long can these new 14nm chips run at higher frequencies.
Why the @#@* there is even 32 bit Windows put into normal end-user devices is a correct response.just to show they are running on 64 bit UEFI, no 32 bit OS capable. Kinda OK for me, not sure about the 8300.
Funny typo the guy made This was fixed to:Good news for Broxton. SeekingAlpha reports:
Intel's Broxton could be delayed to H2 2016.
Intel's Cherry Trail Atom chips are almost here, and if you're in the market for an Intel-based tablet the future looks bright.
We briefly got our hands on what could be the first Cherry Trail tablet shown publicly -- an 8-inch prototype from Intel running Android with a variety of apps and games installed. The graphics in particular stood out.
The game "Real Racing 3" took some time to load, but when it started the display kept pace easily with the fast-moving visuals. A previous Bay Trail chip in an Asus Transformer Book T100 struggled with demanding games, showing how far the Atom X5 and X7 chips, as they're known, have come.
The tablet wasn't connected to the Internet, so we didn't get a taste of the Wi-Fi speed or how fast cloud applications will load. But other local apps fired up quickly. The tablet had USB 3.0 and HDMI ports and a audio jack.
The first Cherry Trail tablets will have 7-inch to 10-inch screens and are expected to range in price from about US$120 to $500. Asus, Lenovo, Acer, Dell, Toshiba and Hewlett-Packard will all ship them in the first half of the year.
The first Cherry Trail tablets will have 7-inch to 10-inch screens and are expected to range in price from about US$120 to $500. Asus, Lenovo, Acer, Dell, Toshiba and Hewlett-Packard will all ship them in the first half of the year.
Okay this is starting to piss me off. We were supposed to get cherry trail prior to christmas thus q4 2014 and they are not even saying q1 2015 but possibly q2 2015.
Intel stop being a damn tease, especially when we have already been let down on the cpu part of your chip (limited architecture improvements even for a die shrink, not much frequency bump) with us only getting better battery life and graphics.
Okay this is starting to piss me off. We were supposed to get cherry trail prior to christmas thus q4 2014 and they are not even saying q1 2015 but possibly q2 2015.
Intel stop being a damn tease, especially when we have already been let down on the cpu part of your chip (limited architecture improvements even for a die shrink, not much frequency bump) with us only getting better battery life and graphics.
Actually some Dell roadmaps indicated we might have seen CT in Q3 of last year!
Also I'd like to make a small change to your post. It should be "zero architecture improvements". GPU is not impressive either.
Okay this is starting to piss me off. We were supposed to get cherry trail prior to christmas thus q4 2014 and they are not even saying q1 2015 but possibly q2 2015.
What a nonsense. You are deluded to claim that 2x the gfx performance doesn't make a difference. Even for user experience, think about video decoding.
For users imo its more or less the same product.
That's what it really seems like. No reason to upgrade to a CHT device if the user already has a capable BT device.
Because CHT is still way off and Intel itself doesn't like to tell us the truth. According to some OEM Roadmaps Cherry Trail devices are coming in June. In case there is another small issue CHT slips into H2 2015.