MSI’s Summit E16 Flip Evo Refreshes with Intel Tiger Lake Processors

MSI’s Summit E16 Flip Evo Refreshes with Intel Tiger Lake Processors

3 years ago
Anonymous $LNMzUc6XNz

https://wccftech.com/msis-summit-e16-flip-evo-refreshes-with-intel-tiger-lake-processors/

Xotic PC has listed the MSI Summit E16 Flip Evo with two CPU options, and these two CPU options include the Intel Core i7-1195G7 and the Intel Core i5-1155G7 processors. Both of these processors are part of Intel's upcoming Tiger lake refresh. The Core i7 Summit E16 Flip model is listed at $1,699, while the i5 Summit E16 Flip model retails at $1,499. But models can already be customized and preordered.

These upcoming models use the onboard Intel Iris Xe Graphics to power the 16-inch QHD screen; the Intel Iris Xe graphics has a total of 96 execution units. This means that the Intel Iris Xe has more execution units than Intel's discrete GPU, which features eighty execution units. This may show that the upcoming Iris architectures offer more performance when compared to Intel’s own Xe-LP-based discrete GPU.

MSI’s Summit E16 Flip Evo Refreshes with Intel Tiger Lake Processors

May 25, 2021, 5:16am UTC
https://wccftech.com/msis-summit-e16-flip-evo-refreshes-with-intel-tiger-lake-processors/ > Xotic PC has listed the MSI Summit E16 Flip Evo with two CPU options, and these two CPU options include the Intel Core i7-1195G7 and the Intel Core i5-1155G7 processors. Both of these processors are part of Intel's upcoming Tiger lake refresh. The Core i7 Summit E16 Flip model is listed at $1,699, while the i5 Summit E16 Flip model retails at $1,499. But models can already be customized and preordered. > These upcoming models use the onboard Intel Iris Xe Graphics to power the 16-inch QHD screen; the Intel Iris Xe graphics has a total of 96 execution units. This means that the Intel Iris Xe has more execution units than Intel's discrete GPU, which features eighty execution units. This may show that the upcoming Iris architectures offer more performance when compared to Intel’s own Xe-LP-based discrete GPU.