

Intel started a long way behind on GPUs, and will be even further behind when – or if – Falcon Shores debuts in 2024.Īnd if the troubled giant manages to ship the architecture in that year, it will still have missed deadlines it set itself – adding to a long list of products that ended up arriving late and in configurations that rivals had already surpassed.

Nvidia had standalone product in the market for both punters and pros for more than a decade, while Intel focused on integrated graphics.

There's no way to sugarcoat Intel's status as a GPU laggard: Ponte Vecchio was years late and the Arc range of standalone consumer GPUs debuted only last year. And with Intel's business-focused GPU roadmap having been elongated, customers will probably need to wait at least a year before they get to see if "continuous delivery" offers anything worthy.Īssuming continuous delivery even works for these products, given Intel's remarks hat HPC customers need longer lead times to prepare their environments for this sort of hardware.
