Intel and AMD are arming themselves for battle in laptops, desktops, and graphics. No matter who wins, 2021 is shaping to be an excellent year for PC enthusiasts.
AMD's rivalry with Intel and Nvidia is continuing at CES 2021. Following Intel's keynote and ahead of Nvidia's announcement, AMD made some big announcements.
Thanks to HDMI 2.1, Asus' new desktop monitors are versatile enough to support PC gamers as well as console players on Microsoft Xbox Series X or Sony PlayStation 5.
Razer's Project Brooklyn Gaming Chair is all about an immersive gaming experience. Inspired by rollable displays, the chair puts you in the middle of the game.
Lenovo unveiled its refreshed Legion laptop lineup at CES, and the company is turning to AMD's latest Ryzen processors -- rather than Intel -- for gaming.
If you're waiting for supplies to normalize before upgrading to a new GPU from AMD or Nvidia, be prepared to pay 25% more due to Trump's import tariffs.
A professional-grade display with better color accuracy, brightness, and contrast is set to join Apple's M1 processor on 2021's refreshed 16-inch MacBook Pro.
Lenovo's IdeaPad laptops come with the broadest selection of processor choices, including ARM-based Snapdragon with 5G connectivity, Intel, or AMD silicon.
Huge demand for Nvidia's GeForce RTX 3080 has resulted in GPU shortages. We are learning that profitable cryptocurrency mining is also a contributing factor.
AMD's secret GPU weapon with RDNA 3 is chiplets. Adopting a design used on Ryzen processors, future graphics cards could benefit from big performance uplifts.
With an 89% improvement in performance, AMD's latest Ryzen 5000 platform becomes a tempting upgrade option for Team Red gamers on the original Zen platform.
A list of unannounced Ampere-based Nvidia GPUs shows that the RTX 3080 Ti could slot right in between the RTX 3080 flagship and the enthusiast-class RTX 3090.
HP's refreshed EliteBook and ZBook laptops come with performance upgrades, plus a new Easy Clean mode perfect for mobile productivity during the pandemic.
If you want a sleek gaming PC with a modular design for easy upgrades, Razer's Tomahawk fits the bill. Be prepared to pay at least $2,399 for that privilege.