The first clip is a demo of an early Raptor Lake-HX Refresh laptop with Thunderbolt 5 support. The machine is connected to a Thunderbolt 5 dock with 2TB of NVMe storage inside, and then that dock is handling all of the I/O for the machine. That includes both the keyboard and the mouse as well as the speakers, a 4K monitor, and a 6K monitor, all on top of a 4K webcam.
The second clip is shorter, but no less impressive. Another Intel employee has a Meteor Lake prototype laptop connected to a large external screen, and demonstrates the live application of AI-powered video effects to a short clip. Thanks to the presence of the Meteor Lake NPU, applying the VFX in real time to the video only takes about 20% CPU time on the system. Not bad at all considering it’s layering like five different effects on what appears to be a high-res video.
We can also pull a lot of interesting details from the task manager view above. This chip appears to have 22 threads over 16 cores, which should shake down as a 6P+8E+2LPE core configuration. The system really only needs E-cores active here as the NPU takes care of the AI effects and the GPU handles the decoding, both of which are also visible under the Performance tab.
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