power plan
Core Ultra 9 285K tested: 10 must-know facts about Intel's radically new CPUs
Intel's new desktop CPUs are radically different than the Intel CPUs you're used to. Today marks the launch of Arrow Lake, the company's latest architecture for desktop processors, formally sold as the Core Ultra 200S Series. According to Intel's claims, this batch of Core chips is faster and far more power efficient than last-gen Raptor Lake CPUs, while still beating out the competition. However, Arrow Lake isn't notable just for what it does, but also for what it is. As the first set of desktop x86 processors shipped but not fabricated by Intel, TSMC's involvement in their production is but one new standout aspect. Intel has reworked its chip design, too--and the overhaul comes with some quirks, as we discovered during our testing.
Clean Power Plan Repeal Would Cost America $600 Billion, Cause 120,000 Premature Deaths
The Trump administration has prioritized repealing the Clean Power Plan (CPP), a set of rules by the U.S. EPA aimed at limiting pollution from power plants. New analysis shows that repealing the rule would cost the U.S. economy hundreds of billions of dollars, add more than a billion tons of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, and cause more than 100,000 premature deaths due to inhaled particulate pollution. Energy Innovation utilized the Energy Policy Simulator (EPS) to analyze the effects of repealing the CPP. The EPS is an open-source computer model developed to estimate the economic and emissions effects of various combinations of energy and environmental policies using non-partisan, published data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), U.S. EPA, Argonne National Laboratory, U.S. Forest Service, and U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics, among others. The EPS has been peer reviewed by experts at MIT, Stanford University, Argonne National Laboratory, Berkeley National Laboratory, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.