Intel Iris Xe DG1 GPU first benchmark suggests inferior performance to the Radeon RX 550
Intel teases Xe HPG graphics and kicks off a GPU scavenger hunt
Intel's upcoming Xe HPG graphics card could compete with Big Navi and Ampere
Intel's Iris Xe desktop graphics cards are shipping to OEMs
The Last Time Intel Tried to Make a Graphics Card
Will history repeat itself? Intel's setting out to make a name for itself in the discrete GPU space with its upcoming Xe-HP GPU lineup. We look at Project Larrabee - the last time Intel tried making a graphics card - to understand how things might turn out.
Intel Xe DG1 GPU is shipping and will release this year
Intel offers Tiger Lake Core i7-1185G7 laptop performance preview
Opinion: Intel chip advancements show they're up for a competitive challenge
Intel's fourth Xe microarchitecture is for enthusiast gamers
Intel Xe integrated graphics are seen contesting Nvidia's discrete GeForce MX350
Intel demos Tiger Lake mobile chip running Battlefield V at 30 fps
Intel won't benchmark GPUs with more than 768 shaders and 3GB memory
Intel's Raja Koduri confirms that massive 'father of all' GPU is aimed at the data center
Intel tweets a photo of the biggest and weirdest GPU ever made
Intel Xe Graphics Preview v2.0: What we know about Intel's upcoming GPU
Intel is developing discrete GPUs for gamers, professionals, and servers, and they're all slated for release this year or coming in 2021. Intel's cards will either be the long-awaited saviors of a stagnant market, or they'll underperform and flop miserably (no pressure, Intel PR person reading this). This is our second round of investigation into Xe.
Intel hires former AMD executive to lead discrete GPU development
Intel reveals Ponte Vecchio, its Xe HPC GPU
Linux driver code points toward multi-GPU support in Intel's upcoming discrete video cards
Intel Xe Graphics Preview: What we know (and what we don't)
Come 2020 Intel will be back in the discrete graphics business and is expected to launch a new GPU for gamers. We can see this going one of two ways: Intel graphics become the butt of the next generation of PC jokes, or they achieve a miracle and enter a market that's been dominated by just two players since the start of the millennia.