frame generation
I tested Panther Lake. You're going to want this
PCWorld tested Intel's new Panther Lake Core Ultra X9 388H processor, which delivers gaming laptop performance through integrated graphics comparable to Nvidia GeForce 4050 chips. The chip achieves impressive battery life up to 27 hours while maintaining strong performance, with AI frame generation boosting gaming from 52 to 92 fps in titles like Cyberpunk. Panther Lake faces competition from AMD's Ryzen AI Max and Qualcomm's Snapdragon X2, but Intel's early 2025 release provides significant market advantage.
- North America > United States > Indiana (0.04)
- North America > United States > California (0.04)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games > Computer Games (1.00)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Information Technology > Hardware (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
AMD's Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT target '4K gaming at a 1440p price'
The long wait is over. After kinda-sorta-teasing the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT at CES 2025, AMD is finally pulling back the curtain on its next-generation graphics cards today, ahead of a March 6 launch date. AMD shuffled Radeon's branding this generation to mirror Nvidia's; the Radeon 599 RX 9070 XT will thus compete with the 749 RTX 5070 Ti, while the Radeon 549 RX 9070 takes aim at the 549 RTX 5070. Let's start with an overview of the improvements found in AMD's new RDNA 4 graphics architecture, before moving onto details about the Radeon RX 9070 series specifically, and what's coming with FSR 4 and Hypr-RX. One thing revealed in AMD's CES teaser: The Radeon 9000-series is built from the ground up for an AI future.
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.50)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.40)
- Information Technology > Graphics (0.40)
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 review: Pure AI excess for 2,000
A 2,000 video card for consumers shouldn't exist. The GeForce RTX 5090, like the 1,599 RTX 4090 before it, is more a flex by NVIDIA than anything truly meaningful for most gamers. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said as much when he revealed the GPU at CES 2025, assuming that it'll be for hardcore players who have 10,000 rigs. Personally, I don't know anyone who actually fits that bill, not unless you count parasocial relationships with streamers. But we all know why NVIDIA is hyping up the unattainable RTX 5090: It lets the company show off benchmarks that AMD can't touch, once again cementing itself as the supreme leader of the high-end video card market.
- Information Technology > Hardware (1.00)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games > Computer Games (0.49)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.71)
- Information Technology > Graphics (0.70)
Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 review: Brutally fast, but DLSS 4 is the game changer
Nvidia's GeForce RTX 5090 is the most brutally fast graphics card ever introduced, augmented by new DLSS 4 technology that feels like magic. But you pay dearly for it, and it feels like this GPU was designed more for AI researchers than PC gamers. The wait is finally over. The long-awaited GeForce RTX 5090 lands on store shelves in January -- and friends, the flagship graphics card for Nvidia's new "Blackwell" architecture is an absolute monster. It should be for 2,000, of course.
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.87)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games > Computer Games (0.87)
Nvidia's DLSS 4 is so much more than just 'fake frames'
This year at CES, Nvidia presented the next generation of its DLSS upscaling technology, which is trained with the help of artificial intelligence, alongside the new GeForce RTX 5090, 5080, and 5070 (Ti) graphics cards. The company touted its major advantages -- and now that RTX 5090 reviews are live, we can confirm that DLSS 4 indeed feels like black magic, supercharging frame rates and making games feel just as snappy as the beloved Doom 2016. That's because DLSS 4 now supports Multi Frame Generation (MFG), an AI-based multiple intermediate frame calculation that can artificially generate up to three images and insert them between two "real" frames, thus quadrupling the frame rate. Of course, this feature only works on new Blackwell-based RTX 50-series GPUs. But are the AI frames generated in this way a step forward or is it all hogwash?
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.81)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games > Computer Games (0.33)
NVIDIA announced DLSS 4 will come to all RTX GPUs
At CES 2025, NVIDIA introduced DLSS 4, the latest version of its real-time image upscaling technology, and announced that it will come to all RTX GPUs. That includes the RTX 20 series that was discontinued back in 2020, but the older models aren't getting all its features. In the new GeForce RTX 50 series models, DLSS 4 will enable Multi Frame Generation. This feature will generate up to three additional frames for every traditionally rendered one, and it can help multiply frame rates by up to eight times more than traditional brute-force rendering. NVIDIA claims 4K 240 FPS fully ray-traced gaming will be possible thanks to Multiple Frame Generation when using its GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, the new 1,999 flagship GPU arriving later this month.
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.59)
- Information Technology > Graphics (0.59)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.50)
NVIDIA DLSS 4 is coming to all RTX GPUs
NVIDIA has introduced DLSS 4, the latest version of its real-time image upscaling technology, at CES 2025. It is coming to all RTX GPUs, including the RTX 20 series that was discontinued back in 2020, but the older models aren't getting all its features. In the new GeForce RTX 50 series models, DLSS 4 will enable Multi Frame Generation. The feature generates up to three additional frames for every traditionally rendered one and can help multiply frame rates by up to eight times more than traditional brute-force rendering. NVIDIA says the improvements brought by Multiple Frame Generation on the GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, its new 1,999 flagship GPU arriving this month, will enable 4K 240 FPS fully ray-traced gaming.
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.59)
- Information Technology > Graphics (0.59)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.50)
The next generation of PC graphics will kick off at CES 2025
The graphics card hype train left the station weeks before CES 2025 kicks off in early January, with the launch of Intel's 249 Arc B580 – the GPU we've begged for since the pandemic. But make no mistake: Intel decided to launch its second-gen Arc in December because CES is shaping up to be an absolute banger for graphics card releases. Nvidia is already teasing an RTX 50-series announcement at CEO Jensen Huang's keynote, while the rumor mill claims AMD's new Radeon cards will also make an appearance at the show. Yes, friends, after a disappointing few years for graphics cards, the next generation of gaming goodness should be unveiled at CES 2025 and Nvidia, AMD, and Intel look ready to brawl. Let's start with Nvidia's hotly anticipated GeForce RTX 50-series, because the company is already actively, not-so-slyly teasing it.
- Information Technology > Hardware (1.00)
- Information Technology > Graphics (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.97)
AMD's wins, fails, and WTF moments of 2024
No doubt about it, AMD had a very good year. Our recap of AMD's highs, lows, and head-scratching moments of 2024 doesn't reveal too many mistakes. At times, Intel stumbled through 2024 like someone coming home from the pub on Christmas Eve. But AMD was steady, reliable, and mostly dependable. See if you agree with us as we walk through the best and worst of AMD's 2024, as we've done (or will do) for Microsoft, Google, and Intel.
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games > Computer Games (0.31)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.31)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.72)
AI upscaling killed native graphics gaming. We're better off for it
Even for me, someone who's an avid graphics card hardware enthusiast, it took some time to warm up to the idea of AI rdesolution upscaling. But this newfangled technology has been embraced over the past few years by virtually every major GPU manufacturer, with Nvidia leading the pack with DLSS and others following in its wake, including AMD with FSR, Intel with XeSS, and even Sony with PSSR on the PlayStation 5 Pro. And I'm now ready to say it: real-time AI upscaling tech has made native resolution graphics obsolete in gaming. Keep reading to learn what AI upscaling is, why it's revolutionary, and what it means for all the new games you'll be playing in the future. AI resolution upscaling (also just called AI upscaling) is when a game renders its frames at a resolution that's lower than your display's native resolution, then uses AI image processing techniques to scale that rendered frame back up to native resolution.
- Semiconductors & Electronics (0.36)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games (0.30)