Intel laptop 13"

€1,233.49

Laptop with intel hashwell processor and finnish keyboard.

 

At CES 2013 in Las Vegas, Intel has taken the wraps off its plans for smartphones, tablets, and ultrabooks for the upcoming year. As you can probably imagine, most of these plans revolve around the fourth-generation Haswell architecture, but Intel is also showing off some exciting developments in the realm of smartphone/tablet SoCs (Medfield/Bay Trail), and a beautiful new ultrabook reference design.

First things first: Intel has confirmed the arrival of 7-watt Ivy Bridge parts, available to OEMs today, primarily for use in tablets and laptops. Intel also confirmed that there will be 7-watt variants of Haswell, again for tablets and laptops (or, as the case may be, convertibles — but more on that in a bit). These low-power parts are designated with a “Y,” with the top-end i7-3689Y (Ivy Bridge) clocking in at 1.5GHz (2.6GHz Turbo Boost). Intel didn’t give us any more details on Haswell itself, except to say that the new chips will offer the biggest ever generation-to-generation jump in battery life. The first chips (and Haswell-powered devices) are due sometime in spring this year.