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The good news for Intel? 2024’s almost over. Our collection of the highs and lows of Intel’s 2024 will have you reaching for the brandy. They weren’t good.

I mean, aside from some of Intel’s mobile chips, what exactly did it do right? Let’s put it this way: when your he was kicked out, it was a bad year. As we’ve done for other companies in the past, we’ve collected the best, worst, and head-scratching moments from the past year. Get yourself a hot mug of cider or a cold glass of egg nog, and sit down with as we recap Intel’s 2024.



And hold on — it’s going to get bumpy. Crashing Intel 13th-gen/14th-gen CPUs: FAIL Intel’s year-long saga of mediocrity just would not go away. From a January advisory by RadTools through more that stretched through the summer, Intel’s latest 13th- and 14th-gen desktop chips were plagued by two questions: , and, more importantly ? Eventually, Intel solved the problem of why desktop systems with both chips inside ran the risk of blue-screening: a that contributed to a But once the bug was identified, it needed to be fixed.

And to try to and finally nail down the problem, which lasted until September. Right now, there’s no way of telling if your CPU has been damaged — well, except for a crash, of course. helped, of course, but the reputation of Intel’s Raptor Lake architecture was irrevocably tarnished.

Thank goodness Arrow Lake was waiting in the wings, huh? Intel 14th-gen Core HX notebooks: WIN At least Intel’s Core .

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