PCWorld

The monstrous, momentous PC hardware of Computex 2019

CES is where the technology industry goes to dream. Computex, in Taipei, Taiwan, is where things get real ahead of the crucial back-to-school and holiday seasons. At this year’s show, some of the PC’s most ambitious dreams are finally becoming tangible.

This was a Computex to remember. AMD flexed its hard-earned 7nm muscle, beating both Intel and Nvidia to the punch with cutting-edge Ryzen and Radeon chips. But those giants pushed back hard, rolling out new laptop initiatives—and Intel’s long-delayed 10nm processors.

Chipmakers weren’t the only companies strutting their stuff. Computer makers showed off all sorts of wild new gear, from wood-clad laptops to funky multi-screen notebooks to a radical new vision for desktops that move beyond the boring-old ATX form factor. And did we mention PCIe 4.0 is a thing now?

Buckle up, and be sure to hit those links throughout to learn more about each topic.

1. AMD’S CUTTING-EDGE RYZEN ONSLAUGHT

with a bang, revealing its hotly anticipated Ryzen 3000-series processors—culminating in a monstrous 12-core, $500 chip that marks the debut of the Ryzen

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PCWorld

PCWorld8 min read
Asus Zenbook 14 OLED: A Budget Laptop Star
AMD’s Ryzen mobile chips are increasingly competitive with Intel’s Core mobile lineup, and in recent years, AMD has taken a lead in some areas, such as battery life. The new Ryzen 7 8840HS is one of AMD’s best mid-range mobile processors yet, and it
PCWorld13 min readSecurity
Avira Prime: Comprehensive, Userfriendly Antivirus
Tucked within Windows are different utilities to protect and manage your PC — but not all are easily found, much less in one spot or in an immediately understandable format. Independent antivirus software suites try to capitalize on this weakness, bu
PCWorld4 min read
Qualcomm says Snapdragon X Elite kicks Intel Core Ultra’s butt
When Qualcomm showed off its benchmarks of its new Snapdragon X Elite chips last October, there was one flaw in its argument: Qualcomm was comparing the new Snapdragon platform to Intel’s older 13th-gen Core chips. That’s been fixed. Now Qualcomm say

Related Books & Audiobooks