Home » Technology » Beast Canyon, Alder Lake and air-cooled RX 6900 XT Toxic

Beast Canyon, Alder Lake and air-cooled RX 6900 XT Toxic

Intel has provided more information about their bastard to NUC called Beast Canyon. In the same vein, a new rumor regarding upcoming Alder Lakes enthusiast processors has begun to circulate.

This week we have two new products detailed and a new reputation. The first two points include Intel’s unusually large NUC unit called Beast Canyon and a new graphics card from Sapphire that has now removed the water cooling from the RX 6900 XT Toxic and blown on a really large air cooler. The rumor that is starting to spread is related to Intel’s upcoming Alder Lake architecture and which market segment will see the upcoming processors first.

Luftkylt RX 6900 XT Toxic

Sapphire has now unveiled a new version of its flagship model for AMD’s Radeon RX 6900 XT. Initially, the manufacturer’s Toxic variant of the graphics card was equipped with a water block from the factory. Now, however, an air-cooled variant of the same graphics card has been unveiled. Now with a solid cooler solution that takes up three expansion slots, slightly adjusted clock frequencies and a currently unclear price tag.

Read more at Videocardz.

Alder Lake first for enthusiasts?

It is already known that Intel’s architecture Alder Lake is approaching launch. Now a new report says that it will be the top segment of consumer units that will be launched first. More specifically, these will be the unlocked “K” and “KF” variants that will land next to the motherboard with the control circuit Z690.

Read more at Hexus.

Beast Canyon lands shortly

Intel has now provided more information about the NUC device called Beast Canyon that was secretly shown in connection with Computex 2021. Here we see a surprisingly large NUC with an eight-liter chassis and space for graphics cards with a length of up to 30 centimeters. The computer also offers a choice between two eight-core processors, up to 64 GB DDR4-3200 memory, Wifi 6E, Bluetooth 5.2 and Intel Optane memory.

Read more at Kitguru.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.