Rumor: Intel To Release Six Alder Lake Processors for Desktops Nov. 4 Pre-orders Start October 27
On November 4, it appears to have been verified that Intel's first Alder Lake processors will be available for purchase. Alder Lake review embargoes will expire on that day, and sales of these chips will begin the following day.
Wccftech sources indicate that Intel will unveil its first six Alder Lake processors on Wednesday, October 27 at 6 p.m. CEST. The CPUs will be available for purchase (pre-order) immediately. Overclockable K and KF processors are the first to be introduced by the business, KF versions being the only ones that did not have an integrated graphics processor.
Intel will initially release models from its Core i9, Core i7, and Core i5 series processors, to name a few examples. On October 27, the business would also reveal only the highest-ranking chipset, which would be the Z690. All of this is consistent with earlier rumors as well as previously publicized information from internet retailers. Lower-ranking processors and chipsets should start appearing in the first quarter of next year. Additionally, the first Alder Lake laptop processors are projected to be available in early 2022. According to the website, the review embargoes on these Alder Lake processors will be lifted on Thursday, November 4, at 2 p.m. CEST.
At the same time, the CPUs should be made available for purchase.
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Not a good argument when the scheduler was specifically "optimized" for Intel's new architecture.....or when it's already been documented that Intel's new architecture has issues with DRM.....
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Becaue Intel knows that these CPUs will be DOA

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I don't think so. Intel have been bullish about ADL, and while some of that may still be bravado and hubris, Gelsinger has fired some serious shots. Not something you'd do if you had any doubts about your competitiveness. I've also noticed some reputable media outlets mentioning ADL leaked benchmarks. It's not something they usually do. Considering most (if not all) are most certainly under NDAs, I interpret that as a hint. We'll know everything soon enough, but other than some initial growing pains, based on those leaks I do think ADL is going to be a winner for Intel. And hopefully for us all in the long run.
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1) i'm very happy Intel is no longer complacent and that an engineer is C.E.O.
2) AL mobile is more interesting to me than desktop
3) RL will be the real challenge to Zen 3+ ... right when Zen 4 arrives
4)


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This will be one of Intel's worst launch in their companies history. The other two that I recall back was the Pentium 4 NetBurst strategy and choosing RAMBUS memory. Also may I add years back on them trying to make their own GPU and used a demo instead of playing the game live.
DDR5 and Windows11 won't save them but may buy them time and also add MICROSOFT hampering AMD CPU's again. INTEL escape-goat will be Windows 11 is just " too new" to take advantage of their new architecture.