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Intel sandy Bridge |
So it appears that performance/gaming laptops are the first to benefit from the new platform, which is based on a 32nm manufacturing process. HP is sprucing up its 17.3-inch dv7 portable, while Gateway and Lenovo (the Y560P) have 15.6-inch systems coming. The latter pair are already listed on etailer sites, though as “special order” or “back ordered.” It’s doubtful these models will be ready to ship before CES, when Intel could unveil a full lineup of Sandy Bridge systems.
One other noteworthy spec for the HP and Lenovo laptops: They both include AMD Mobility Radeon HD 6570 graphics cards, which are part of AMD’s new 6000M series. They come with 1GB of dedicated graphics memory and support DirectX 11 as well as AMD’s HD3D technology. So while the new Sandy Bridge quad-core will help extend Intel’s dominance at the upper end of the laptop performance charts, AMD can take a tiny bit of solace in the fact that at least its latest graphics card is being included in these new notebooks.
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