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Lenovo Legion Y9000K 2024 gaming laptop debuts with Intel Core i9 and Nvidia RTX 4090

Started by Redaktion, February 21, 2024, 16:23:46

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Redaktion

Lenovo has officially announced the Legion Y9000K 2024 in China, with the launch set for February 27. The gaming laptop has an Intel Core i9-14900HX CPU, Nvidia RTX 4090 GPU, 64 GB of DDR5 RAM, 2 TB SSD, a mini LED screen, and a built-in water cooling system. It will likely debut as the Legion 9i 2024 in the international markets.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-Legion-Y9000K-2024-gaming-laptop-debuts-with-Intel-Core-i9-and-Nvidia-RTX-4090.805598.0.html

NikoB

The stupidest combination of two power cheaters - Intel and NVidia. Obviously with fake performance (individually they are cool, but together they turn into a pumpkin, because consumption immediately approaches the monstrous 300W+ and this is in laptops!) in reviews, because the 14900HX is catastrophically inferior to last year's 7945HX. That's why AMD didn't even release Zen5 in the fall of 2023. Why? You can get through this year with the Zen4/+ SoC. Without Zen5, Intel is still sadly lagging behind with its obsolete cores at "10nm++++++++".

By the time Intel finally sadly switches to "7nm", AMD will already release Zen5 on TSMC's "3nm" in the fall of 2024.

commonNikoBL

Quote from: NikoB on February 21, 2024, 16:40:21The stupidest combination of two power cheaters - Intel and NVidia. Obviously with fake performance (individually they are cool, but together they turn into a pumpkin, because consumption immediately approaches the monstrous 300W+ and this is in laptops!) in reviews, because the 14900HX is catastrophically inferior to last year's 7945HX. That's why AMD didn't even release Zen5 in the fall of 2023. Why? You can get through this year with the Zen4/+ SoC. Without Zen5, Intel is still sadly lagging behind with its obsolete cores at "10nm++++++++".

By the time Intel finally sadly switches to "7nm", AMD will already release Zen5 on TSMC's "3nm" in the fall of 2024.
oh you're just so wrong it hurts lol. First, Intel has ALREADY moved away from 10nm in its latest chips. your jokes are about 2 years too late. Second, I bet you didn't know that Intel's 10nm has a HIGHER transistor density than TSMC's 7nm did you? Which means it's a move advanced node production.
Per PC Gamer article from 2020: "Intel is likely to be keen on adopting a new standard metric as it tends to come out on top in raw transistor density as it stands today. Intel reports a density of 100.76MTr/mm2 (mega-transistor per squared millimetre) for its 10nm process, while TSMC's 7nm process is said to land a little behind at 91.2MTr/mm2 (via Wikichip)."
pcgamer<dotcom>chipmaking-process-node-naming-lmc-paper

you might wanna get your facts straight and update your jokes next time you comment or else you'll embarrass yourself again.

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