Just as there is a good hunter and a bad hunter, there is also Intel CPU 13th and 14th generation desktops and mobile phones. If you remember, developersAlderon Games 10 days ago, it cast a shadow over Intel’s booth by announcing that due to crashes on 13th and 14th generation Core CPUs, it had to switch to AMD hardware. Normally, this is the kind of statement that makes your head hurt, but apparently, betaine citrate is not there yet. The residue will last a bit longer than Intel had anticipated. In fact, Alderon Games It announces that its devices, this time equipped with 13th and 14th Gen Core mobile CPUs, are also crashing, with no way to fix the problem.
Apparently, it was too much for Intel, which responded this time with something more detailed. In the first attack, Intel said it was continuing its investigations to find the origin of the problem affecting desktop CPUs, and it certainly wouldn’t succeed very quickly, especially if it was a real hardware issue, etc. The arrival of Lake Arrow will gradually drown the fish. This time, via the response posted via Digital TrendIntel claims that these crashes are not its fault, and are not related to any failure in its CPUs. In short, it has nothing to do with this time, and it places the blame squarely on software and hardware issues in these portable gas turbines. If the crashes seem identical on the surface, Intel is not responsible for the problems Alderon Games has experienced on its laptops. This means that developers can fix this problem by cleaning up their machines of the major software bugs that are causing the pain.
It's hard to know who's telling the truth, and it's probably even more complicated this time around, but how can we not say it could be true, all you have to do is buy a cell phone off the shelf to see the factory in the gas with 36 limited edition spyware/utilities/antivirus programs capable of crashing the device faster than it would take to say so. On the other hand, maybe this bad hype is too much, and Intel can also seek to clear its name so as not to ruin its business. It's not over for the desktop, it's over for mobile, Intel has decided!