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According to Intel, devices based on the new Atom x5 and Atom x7 chips will be available in the first half of 2015. Devices are expected to come from traditional Intel partners such as ASUS ...
We found out what Intel has in store for the mobile market this year at MWC today. The new Intel Atom x3, x5, and x7 are designed to cater for every market segment.
The Atom x5-8300, Atom x5-8500, and Atom x7-8700 are Intel's first mobile chips based on the Cherry Trail platform—the 14nm version of Bay Trail. On the CPU side of things (they're all quad-core ...
The Atom x5 and x7 SoCs don’t come with integrated data solutions, but will play nicely with Intel’s LTE MM276x modem, which supports Cat-6 speeds and carrier aggregation. These two chips will ...
Moving on to the Cherry Trail -based Atom x5 and x7, these are the first Atom SoCs to be built using a 14nm manufacturing process. Both processor families of course support 64-bit processing ...
The first Atom x3, x5 and x7 processors will probably be 14nm 'Cherry Trail' parts. More information on the new Atom range is expected to be revealed by Intel at the MWC next week.
Intel says Atom x5 and x7 chips should be able to handle H.265 video at 4K resolutions at 30 frames per second, 1080p H.265 videos at 120 frames per second, although there’s no mention of bitrate.
Intel recently revealed the availability of its Joule dev kits that are packed with new Atom processors. These chips may not be used in consumer devices.
But with new “SoFIA” Atom X3 systems-on-a-chip (SoCs), along with the new “Cherry Trail” Atom X5 and X7, Intel’s getting closer. Although all three products share the Atom name, they ...
Intel has announced that it is launching a new chip branding programme which will see its low-power Atom parts given similar numerical identifiers to its mainstream Core series: x3, x5, and x7.
Conclusion Intel’s new Atom x5 Z8500 SoC is a winner on paper, but in real life we were let down by Windows throttling issues on our review sample. We could have received a lemon lacking thermal ...
It turns out the truth is a bit weirder: despite what Intel’s website says, it looks like the Atom x5-Z8300 can work with 4GB of RAM. TechTablets spotted evidence of this last month: the Onda ...