The biggest PC news from Computex 2021

Credit: YouTube / AMD

One of the most important trade shows in the PC universe, Computex, unfortunately occurred during the wee hours of the Memorial Day holiday in the United States this year. Fortunately, we kept tabs on the announcements from AMD, Intel, Nvidia and more that you need to know about, and we’ve summed them up below.

If we had to pick an overall “winner,” well, AMD stole the show. A number of CPU, GPU, and even architectural announcements made for a jam-packed Computex presentation. But our email and internal chat channels were busy chewing over what Intel and Nvidia had to offer, too.

In no particular order, here’s what we consider to be the most important stories of Computex.

FidelityFX Super Resolution is AMD’s answer to Nvidia’s DLSS technology, both of which use some computational magic to eke out more frames on your games. AMD’s technology, though, can improve not only its own GPUs but the competition’s as well—yes, even Nvidia’s GTX 10-series GPUs! Even better, there are four levels of graphics performance (in addition to the native performance of the GPU), which, according to this AMD slide, offer frame rates ranging from 49 fps to a whopping 150 fps. That’s insane

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AMD”s FidelityFX Super Resolution looks like a must-have right now.

Remember when Intel introduced the so-called New Unit of Computing (NUC), and just how small they were? No longer. Intel’s entered the traditional small-form-factor PC market with an 11-liter “Beast Canyon” NUC that can house a full-length graphics card alongside a Compute Element with a gaming-class 11th-gen Tiger Lake-H series processor. Intel pitched its glimpse of Beast Canyon as a sneak peek, withholding pricing and availability details. But we looked closely at what details were available, as well as what we think this bad box will be able to accomplish.

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Intel’s Beast Canyon NUC is, well, a beast.

We originally thought the launch of Intel’s Tiger Lake-U parts last September needed a little more oomph. Well, Intel delivered. The company launched a new 5GHz Tiger Lake chip that it claims can top the Ryzen 5800U in both gaming and content creation. By how much, you ask? If you cherry-pick a HandBrake video transcoding benchmark, well, the new 2.9GHz Core i7-1195G7 outperforms the comparable Ryzen by a whopping eightfold. And did we mention Intel now has a 5G module, too?

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