Intel has launched their new Xeon W-3500 fmaily of processors, a refresh of their prior W-3400 family. How do they compare to AMD’s Ryzen Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-series of processors?

Intel has launched their new Xeon W-3500 fmaily of processors, a refresh of their prior W-3400 family. How do they compare to AMD’s Ryzen Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-series of processors?
AMD has launched their new Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-series of processors, offering substantial performance improvements across the board. But, exactly how do they compare to Intel’s Xeon W-3400 line?
With their latest “7000” series of processors, AMD has split their high re-count CPUs into two separate product families: the AMD Threadripper 7000 Series, and the even higher tier AMD Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-Series. But when is it worth it to invest in the PRO line for different content creation workflows?
The 96-Core 7995WX is the highest core count desktop CPU on the market. How does it perform for content creation applications on the TRX50 platform?
AMD has launched their new Threadripper 7000 series of processors, offering substantial performance improvements across the board. But, exactly how do they compare to Intel’s Xeon W-3400 line?
The new Intel Core 14th Gen processors are a refresh update of the previous 13th Gen processors. But, how much faster are they for content creation workflows?
Intel’s 3 NUC 13 Extreme is a highly compact PC that is still capable of hosting high-end hardware like an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080, 64GB of RAM, and multiple M.2 NVMe storage drives. The question is, do you sacrifice any performance with thee ultra-compact NUC 13?
Following the success of the initial launch of their 13th Gen processors, Intel is now launching the Core i9 13900KS which is the first CPU to be capable of hitting 6 GHz at stock settings. But will this make any real difference for content creation?
Modern content creation workstations are incredibly powerful, but just how much faster is a system today versus one 2, 4, 6, or even 7 years ago?
Following AMDs recent release of their Ryzen 7000 Series desktop processors, Intel is fighting back with their own launch of the Core 13th Gen processors (code named “Raptor Lake”). Unlike AMD’s launch which moved to a new socket and added support for DDR5, the 13th Gen CPUs are a drop-in upgrade for the 12th Gen processors since they share the same socket and existing support for DDR5 memory. Even though the base platform is largely unchanged, however, we still expect some big performance gains in a number of content creation workflows.