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Iris pro 580 review
Iris pro 580 review










iris pro 580 review

We’re still trying to get a Razer Blade Stealth and Razer Core in-house for review, and it’s entirely possible that we’ll see cheaper docks in the long run. At $1,500 – $1,600, the Razer Blade Stealth compares better against hypothetical alternate solutions. My initial impression/suspicion is that the Skull Canyon NUC cooling solution is inadequate and is stifling the iGPUs true potential.

iris pro 580 review

This is one of the big graphics solutions from Intel that has 72 Execution Units and along with 128MB of stacked eDRAM. I was searching through the forum, but couldnt find much if any discussion on the gaming performance of the Intel Iris Pro 580 as featured in the Skull Canyon NUC. If you already have a desktop GPU you want to use, you can cut that price tag back $400 – $500. Iris Pro 580 is also known as Intel Gen9 GT4e graphics. Current high-end buy-in prices for a GPU, chassis, and the lowest-end Razer Blade Stealth would come to between $1,800 – $2,000 depending on which desktop GPU you chose to buy. I still think Thunderbolt 3-based external graphics are the best chance for expanding mobile gamer options, but the Core’s $500 price tag means not many people are going to take the option - especially not when the chassis doesn’t ship with a GPU. The Core isn’t just an external chassis - it also offers 4x USB 3.0 ports, gigabit Ethernet, and ships with its own 375W power supply - but $400 – $500 is quite steep, especially considering that the Razer Blade Stealth has a $1,000 minimum price. The Razer Core’s price tagĪccording to Razer, the Core will cost $500 if purchased separately from the Razer Blade Stealth and $400 if bought with either the Razer Blade Stealth or the new Razer Blade refresh. La Intel Iris Pro 580 está formada por 72 EUs junto a una caché eDRAM de 128 MB para ofrecer un rendimiento muy respetable y a la altura de tarjetas gráficas como una GTX 750 e incluso ligeramente por encima. The new NUC (part number NUC6i7KYK) is also fully compatible with the Razer Core, which means gamers interested in both devices can expect to pair Razer’s external chassis with Intel’s hardware with no problems - provided you’re willing to drop some serious cash to do so. The device also supports USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10Gbps), M2.SATA drives, HDMI 2.0 support, and comes with built-in Intel 802.11ac wireless. Based on the performance we’ve seen from other Intel GPUs, the Iris Pro 580 should be a formidable contender. That’s the largest graphics part Intel currently ships, with 78 execution units and a 128MB EDRAM cache. This new device is built around a 45W Core i7 6770HQ CPU with Intel Iris Pro 580 graphics. First, the good news: At GDC this week, Intel announced a new Skull Canyon NUC (Next Unit of Computing).












Iris pro 580 review