Thursday 19 January 2017

Intel kabylake Custom Gaming PC-i5-7400-nzxt elite s340

Intel kabylake Custom Gaming PC-i5-7400-nzxt elite s340


INTEL CORE-I5-7500 PROCESSOR

MOTHERBOARD ASUS H270-PRIME

VGA CARD GTX 1060 6GB DDR5 GRAPHICS CARD

RAM DDR4 8GB 2400MHZ

HDD SEAGATE 1TB SATA 7200RPM

SSD 250GB SATA DESKTOP MEMORY

CPU COOLER HYPER T4 COOLER MASTER

POWER SUPPLY 600WATS 80 PLUS BRONZ

NZXT CASE S340 ELITE


Intel Kaby Lake has officially launched. Today at CES 2017 the firm finally spilled its long-awaited beans all over the new specification chips, motherboards and devices that’ll support Kaby Lake. We’ve rounded up everything we know and have served it up in one, comprehensive article.


Kaby Lake, otherwise known as “7th-gen Core” is Intel’s latest lineup of processors. Several laptops launched at the end of 2016 with Kaby Lake chips on board, but today is the first time we’ve seen the full range of desktop and laptop chips all in one place.


INTEL KABY LAKE: WHAT’S NEW?

Kaby Lake is a minor upgrade because Intel has ditched its ‘Tick-Tock’ approach to processor design, meaning there are no major structural changes to the chip or what it’s capable of.


Previously, each generation of Intel processors would see a reduction in process size (smaller, lower power consumption) and then an improvement in architecture (more powerful). This was called Tick-Tock.


Related: The best gaming PC you can build yourself


Instead of Tick-Tock, Intel has now stretched out the lifespan of a given process size, in this case 14nm (nanometers), to three phases. Its new approach first sees a reduction in process size, then an upgrade to architecture with a final ‘optimisation’ phase added in to make the most of what’s been done so far.


Process, Architecture, Optimisation. Drum that into your head.


This is bad for fans of big-number upgrades, but obviously great for Intel, which is able to make the most of what has become an increasingly complex process of designing chips.


It also means it’s able to offer up fairly small semi-annual upgrades with brand-new model names, which laptop and desktop manufacturers can use to show off and shift more units.


In the case of this generation of 14nm hardware, 5th-Gen ‘Broadwell’ was the process redesign, Skylake was the architecture redesign (meaning an entirely new socket), with Kaby Lake the last hurrah for 14nm before Intel moves onto ‘Cannonlake’, which will be a 10nm design.


 


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