Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Intel Returns to Boxed Workstation CPUs With Xeon 600 | AMD Adopts FRED Together With Intel for Zen 6

Intel returns to boxed workstation CPUs with Xeon 600 | AMD adopts FRED together with Intel for Zen 6 architecture | Lexar Play SE 4TB SSD Review: The oddball of the bunch
Created for yeasinn1.tech@blogger.com | Web Version
 
February 3, 2026
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Big News
 
Tom's Hardware
Intel returns to boxed workstation CPUs with Xeon 600
Granite Rapids WS delivers up to 86 cores, 4TB of memory, and 128 PCIe 5 lanes
 
Tom's Hardware
AMD adopts FRED together with Intel for Zen 6 architecture
Replacement for decades-old IDT can improve performance and stability
 
 
 
 
Reviews
 
Tom's Hardware
Lexar Play SE 4TB SSD Review: The oddball of the bunch
A weird but capacious NVMe SSD
 
 
 
 
Deals
 
Tom's Hardware
Grab a speedy 256GB Samsung USB-C flash drive for just $24.99
Save 52% on tiny waterproof storage for your important files and photos with speeds of up to 400 MB/s
 
 
 
 
CPUs
 
Tom's Hardware
Intel's upcoming Core Ultra 9 290K Plus appears on Geekbench with chart-topping scores
Arrow Lake refresh beats the 285K by ~10% across single- and multithreaded tests
 
 
 
 
Graphics
 
Tom's Hardware
Jensen Huang warns TSMC needs to 'work very hard' to meet AI demand
Nvidia CEO says its demand alone may force doubling its capacity over the next decade
Full Story: Tom's Hardware (2/2)
 
 
 
 
Components
 
Tom's Hardware
Smart ways to help your PC survive through the PC component pricing apocalypse
Check temps, replace old AIOs and PSUs, keep an eye on your boot drive's TBW, and more
 
Tom's Hardware
Homebrew developer runs real-time ray tracing test on 1994 Sega Saturn
Ancient hardware's untapped power revealed, more refinements to come
 
Tom's Hardware
Modder more than doubles Asus ROG Xbox Ally X's memory with massive 64GB RAM upgrade
Advanced soldering and BIOS modification unlock more capacity
 
Tom's Hardware
Researcher builds bizarre 128-byte USB drive the size of a dinner plate using ancient pre-semiconductor magnetic core memory technology
Data disappears once it is read, requiring special handling
 
 
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