ByteSavvy Insights: Unveiling the Top-Rated Electronics of the Year
Is a Machine with Minds Essential for Digital Enthusiasts? Unveiling the Reality
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the tech term of the moment, and everyone in the PC space wants a piece of it. Every major computer company, from the ones that make thebest ultrabooks and laptops to those that put together thebest gaming PCs and desktops, as well as most component manufacturers, want to say they’re offering an AI PC.
But what is an AI PC, exactly? What does it do differently from the computer you already have? Do you need one at all?
Here’s how to cut through the noise to learn what an AI PC actually is:
The many definitions of an AI PC
Since every PC company and component manufacturer wants to say it is offering an AI PC, there are a ton of different definitions out there. Much of the press and the industry has seemingly coalesced aroundMicrosoft’s definition, which Intel shared at an AI PC developer program showing off its Core Ultra “Meteor Lake” processors. That definition had three requirements, suggesting that an AI PC:
- Includes the latest NPU (neural processing unit), CPU, and GPU
- Comes with Microsoft Copilot
- Has theCopilot key on its keyboard
(Image credit: Intel)
This definition did rule out some existing PCs that had AMD and Intel’s NPU and Copilot, but hadn’t included the Copilot key. Most major laptop releases since then have included that key. If you take the Copilot key away, previous Windows on Arm devices, like those running Qualcomm 8cx would also qualify, as those have NPUs and can run Copilot, too. The Copilot key is little more than a branding exercise as it simply launches Copliot bysimulating Shift + WIndows + F23, and one could just hit Windows + C to get the same efffect.
LATEST VIDEOS FROM tomshardware Tom’s Hardware
Copilot+ PCs: Microsoft’s New Standard
Since then,Microsoft has introduced itsCopilot+ PCs, with laptops from Asus, Dell, Acer, Samsung, HP, Lenovo, Samsung, and Microsoft’s Surface brand. Those all useQualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite and Plus processors at the moment, though Microsoft has said upcoming AMD Strix Point (aka Ryzen AI 300) and Intel Lunar Lake chips may also fit the bill. To be considered a Copilot+ PC, laptops need to have at least 16GB RAM, 256GB storage, and an on-board NPU that’s capable of 40 TOPS (trillions of operations per second). The Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chips support 45 TOPS on the NPU.
Copilot+ PCs, the first of which will launch on June 18, 2024, will have a series of four unique Windows AI features that other PCs cannot access. These include Cocreator (image generation in Paint), Windows Studio Effects (webcam blurring and special effects), real-time translation and captions foraudio and Recall. Recall, the controversial feature which keeps a record of almost everything you do on your PC so you can remember it, was justpulled from the Copilot+ launch date build of Windows.
So, anyone who doesn’t buy a Snapdragon X-powered laptop will have to wait on those special Windows features, likely for many months. AMD recently confirmed that itsRyzen AI 300 PCs won’t be getting the Copilot+ features when they launch later this year, but will eventually. Desktop users are left out of the cold until at least the launch of Intel Arrowlake in Q4. And anyone with a current-gen laptop or desktop is probably left out permanently.
Given the weak set of Copilot+ features, anyone who is actually paying attention probably isn’t that sad about having to miss them or wait for them. There are many other ways to get an offline (or online) AI image generator, to do real-time translation and to blur your webcam background. Recall is somewhat unique, but many people won’t want it, because of the privacy risks associated with taking constant screenshots of your work.
Intel and AMD define AI PC more Broadly
Intel,on its website , has taken a more general approach: “An AI PC has a CPU, a GPU and an NPU, each with specific AI acceleration capabilities.”
AMD, via a staff post on its forums, has a similar definition: “An AI PC is a PC designed to optimally execute local AI workloads across a range of hardware, including the CPU (central processing unit), GPU (graphics processing unit), and NPU (neural processing unit).”
Who is making AI PCs?
If you’re following the definition that most of the industry is using: CPU, GPU, and NPU, then the answer is most laptop manufacturers are making them. They includeDell ,HP , Lenovo, Asus, Acer, Samsung, Microsoft, among others.
These are laptops with Intel (Core Ultra “Meteor Lake”), AMD (Ryzen 7040 or 8040), or Qualcomm (Snapdragon X Elite or Plus) processors.
What is an NPU, exactly?
A neural processing unit, or NPU, are processors that specialize in parallel computing specifically for the purpose of AI workloads (GPUs often also use parallel processing in order to render advanced graphics). Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, and Apple have these attached onto the processor with the CPU and integrated GPU.
They’re also highly efficient, allowing for longer battery life than running these processes on a CPU or a GPU (even if, in some cases, those might be the more performant options). NPUs run matrix math, allowing them to do things such as video decoding, upscaling and background removal at a fraction of the power.
An NPU’s performance is measured in tera operations per second, or TOPS. Intel’s Meteor Lake processors and their NPUs can only do about 10 TOPS while Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X processors, AMD’s Ryzen AI 300 processors and Intel’s Lunar Lake chips will all deliver 45 or more TOPS from their NPUs.
What about desktop PCs? What about GPUs?
At the moment, every PC with an NPU is a laptop (or, in some cases, tablets or gaming handhelds). Intel has yet to put an NPU on a desktop chip, but AMD first did back in January with theRyzen 7 8700G andRyzen 5 8600G , each of which support 16 TOPS via Ryzen AI. (Those technically based on mobile designs, but with more power and in a desktop form factor). A big reason to include the NPU on mobile devices is that they are extremely power efficient, which helps with battery life. Desktop systems don’t have batteries, so processor manufacturers can still pump their processors using more wattage.
Additionally, desktops are more likely to have discrete GPUs, which have also proven to be extremely adept at certain AI tasks (though this is mostly high-end parts, like theNvidia GeForce RTX 4090 , which has 24GB of RAM to work with).
In fact, in a recent blog post, Nvidia’s vice president of consumer AI, Jason Paul, suggested that the company started the AI PC boom all the way back in 2018, when it launched its first GPUs with RTX tensor cores andDLSS with the RTX 20-series and Turing architecture. That’s yet another different definition from the ones laptop and CPU companies are making.
While this doesn’t fit the conventional, NPU-focused definition that many are working with, there are a number of companies putting the AI label on desktop PCs, too.
Newegg, for example, is selling its ABS desktops (which start with consumer-grade parts like the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super and an Intel Core i5-14400F for $1,800 and goes up from there),on an AI PC page alongside laptops using Intel NPUs, as well as desktop parts (“AI CPU,” “API GPU”).MSI lists a number of its desktops using 14th Gen Intel processors as “AI Gaming Desktops” because of software that the company includes.
The desktops that make more sense to call AI PCs are workstations that have the power to train some models. Maingear, for instance, sells itsPro AI systems with Intel Xeon chips and Nvidia’s RTX 5000 and RTX 6000 Ada GPUs. These range from $28,000 to $60,000 and are definitely not for people looking just to generate images or photos.
Are Macs AI PCs?
Apple is introducing its take on the AI to Mac laptops and desktops this fall. The company is launching a beta version of Apple Intelligence with generative writing, images, custom emoji, and a more capable version of its Siri assistant in macOS Sequoia this fall (as well as iPadOS 18 and iOS 18).
Apple will support Intelligence on Macs and iPads using its M1, M2, M3, and M4 families of processors. On the iPhone, it will support the A17 Pro on the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max (and presumably whatever is in the next iPhone this fall).
(Image credit: Apple)
Because Apple uses its silicon across all of its Macs, its desktops, like the iMac, Mac Studio, and Mac Pro also have NPU (or as Apple refers to them, Neural Engines). That means macOS will have AI-specific features on desktop running on NPUs before Windows.
Do I need an AI PC?
Right now? “Need” is a strong word.
AI features are still in their infancy. In many cases they’re still in beta. Many popular chatbots, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT andGoogle Gemini, are totally cloud-based, as is most of what Microsoft Copilot does.
That’s not to say there’s no features you’ll miss. On Copilot+ PCs, image generation built intoWindows 11 and Restyle photo editing are exclusive to the new Snapdragon systems. Some other software, like the Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, and Express as well as Da Vinci Resolve will use NPUs for some AI features and the cloud for others. Those NPU features may be slower — or non-existent on older computers.
NPUs are also being used to power background blur and other camera effects on some PCs, though you don’t inherently need an NPU for that kind of work (though it does free up the CPU and GPU).
But across the board, these features are still just rolling out, and it’s unclear which will be the most useful to you. Local AI is more secure, as you don’t have to send your information to another company’s servers, but if you’re using it in limited scenarios, the cloud functionality the most popular apps currently offer should more than suffice.
There’s a lot of hype around AI. And while it has some legitimately cool uses, there are still plenty of places where it’s unclear how much people will want to use it. If your current PC is still doing what you need it to do and is gettingsecurity updates, it may be worth waiting as more powerful tech comes out to support, presumably, more local AI tools, and see what you actually need.
It’s already clear that companies will lock certain features to newer PCs. While early adopters may jump at the chance to try them, there’s also no harm in letting those people be the beta testers (and many of these AI features are being labeled as beta by the companies that make them) and grab something when you know what you want.
Are AI PCs more secure?
One of the biggest pushes for AI on a laptop, rather than in the cloud, is security. After all, running an AI workload on an NPU in your computer means you don’t necessarily need to send your information to the cloud.
That being said, that also means AI features need to be built securely, too. After security researchers discovered how easy it was to steal data from, Recall, Microsoft’s new AI feature that takes screenshots of all your activity, for later reference was pulled from the initial Copilot+ set of features as Microsoft promised more security and testing with Windows Insider members.
If you are running a business and having an LLM manage top-secret corporate data, having it processed locally would be more meaningful. But most of the AI features currently being marketed are not mission-critical business tools. Perhaps ifMicrosoft 365 Copilot ran completely locally, that would be a plus for some companies.
No matter what type of PC you’re using, you should still adhere to good security practices. Other humans are still outsmarting us there.
Bottom line
Right now, the term “AI PC” is still somewhat vague. CPU vendors and Microsoft are using the term to sell you new computers (currently, new laptops only) that have powerful NPUs built into their processors. Most of the generative AI features people actually use today (chatbots, image generators) are free to use in the cloud, making them less than “must-haves” in their local form.
But NPUs do promise to save battery life by performing some common tasks such as video playback at much lower power. Some web browsers, such as Edge, can use the GPU today to do AI upscaling of videos, but soon that will be offloaded to the NPU. For creative professionals who are doing audio, video or photo editing while unplugged, the NPU will tackle tasks such as background noise removal at much lower power than your CPU or graphics card; of course, the software has to be optimized to do so. And, in the near future, we’ll see more tasks transferred to NPUs, which in turn, will increase system efficiency even more.
So, in the end, the killer feature of AI PCs (at least if they are laptops) could really be longer endurance. If your laptop goes from lasting 12 hours on a charge to lasting 20 hours on a charge because of NPU usage, that could be a huge deal. But the generative features are still in their infancy, so if you’re not ready to upgrade, there’s still time to wait and see what evolves.
Correction, June 17, 3:44 p.m. ET: This article has been corrected to point out that AMD has NPUs on the desktop with its Ryzen 8000G processors.
Also read:
- [New] 2024 Approved Unveiling the Secrets to Effective Video Capturing with VSDC & Others
- [New] From Novice to Vlogger Your Guide to Creating a YouTube Chanel for 2024
- [New] Secure Your LinkedIn Content with These 6 Video Downloading Solutions
- [Updated] 2024 Approved Guide to Crafting Twitter Video-Inspired Animated GIFs
- [Updated] Expert Tips for OBS and Facebook Integration for 2024
- [Updated] Tailoring Your PlayStation Experience with Sounds
- Accelerated Energy Production: A Thorough Review of the Unusual Delta Shaped FLSun S1
- ASRock B760 M.2 PCIe Gen4 Motherboard - Budget-Friendly Performance
- Asus ROG Strix XG2^ ACQ: An 180Hz Marvel in Accuracy & Flexibility - The Ultimate Gamer's Display Unveiled
- BlueAnt SoundBlade Testing Results: Beautiful Design, Robust Audio Capability
- Change Location on Yik Yak For your Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023) to Enjoy More Fun | Dr.fone
- Choosing the Optimal Moment to Revamp FB Look
- Comprehensive Evaluation of Netgear Nighthawk X6 Wi-Fi Mesh Extender – Features and Performance
- Comprehensive Hardware Insights by Tom's Review
- Decoding Tech Specs: Advanced Insights From Tom's Hardware Diaries
- Deep Dive Into New PC Builds: Features, Benchmarks, and Analysis by Experts at Tom's Hardware | The Gadget Guide
- Desktop/Online Passport Picture Creation - 10 Per Person
- Elevate Your Raspberry Pi's Speed and Storage With Our Exclusive M.CDN HAT+ Test & Insights
- Evaluating the Lofree Edge: Featherweight, Bright Future, Premium Price vs Apple Magic Board
- Exploring the Latest in Tech: Tom's Comprehensive Guide
- Fixing Problems with Non-Responsive AMD GPU Driver Program
- From Basics to Advanced: Tom’s Comprehensive Hardware Journey
- How to Watch Hulu Outside US On Huawei Nova Y91 | Dr.fone
- In 2024, 3 Effective Methods to Fake GPS location on Android For your OnePlus Ace 2 | Dr.fone
- In 2024, 5 Easy Ways to Change Location on YouTube TV On Xiaomi Redmi 12 5G | Dr.fone
- In 2024, 5 Simple Steps to Quickly Improve Your Filmmaking Skills
- In 2024, CamStreamers Analysis Seeking Superior Solutions
- In 2024, Efficient Media Management Turning Videos Into DVDs with Mac
- In 2024, How to Change Oppo Reno 8T Location on Skout | Dr.fone
- In 2024, How to Remove iPhone SE (2020) SIM Lock?
- In 2024, How to Reset a Vivo Y56 5G Phone that is Locked?
- In 2024, How to Unlock Xiaomi Redmi 13C Phone Password Without Factory Reset?
- In 2024, Mastering the Art of Securing, Cost-Free VLC Player Download on Mac
- In 2024, Top Cinematographer Secrets for Exceptional Visuals
- In 2024, What is the best Pokemon for pokemon pvp ranking On Nubia Red Magic 9 Pro+? | Dr.fone
- In-Depth Analysis of the Clevetura CLVX 1 Bluetooth Keyboard with Pressure-Sensitive Buttons
- In-Depth Review of Keychron K2 HE's Classic Modern Twist
- Inside the World of Computing and More at Tom’s Tech Hub
- Mastering Hardware Knowledge Through Tom's Authoritative Articles
- Mastering Modern Computing: A Deep Dive Into Tom's Hardware World
- Mastering Technology: Inside Look at Tom's Hardware Discoveries
- Mastering the Digital World: The Ultimate Guide to Devices From Tom's Hardware
- Navigating the Future of Technology with Tom's Comprehensive Hardware Analysis
- Navigating Through Tom's Hardware Reviews and Updates
- Precision PC Analysis with Tom's Hardware Experts
- Revamped Bioshock 2 Version - Fixed and Refined Gameplay Experience
- Reviewing Sovol SV08: The Fast and Nimble Homage to Voron Series
- Revive Your Crashed Photographs with No Cost Repair Software - Download Today!
- Solution: A Subdivision Plat Records New Lot Boundaries and Relevant Details for Official Use, Providing a Legally Binding Representation of the Divided Property.
- The Best Value SSD: Pineboard's HatDrive! Nano Unleashed for Raspberry Pi 5/Pi 4 Users
- The Future of Resin 3D Printing with Elegoo's Saturn 4 Ultra - A Detailed Review Exploring Its Technological Advancements.
- The Perfect Balance of Price & Design in the LogitecuG515 Lightspeed TKL Mechanical Keyboard Review
- The Ultimate Face-Off: How Does the Newly Released Asus ROG Keris II Ace Stack Up Against My Favorite, the RageDeathAdder V3 Pro?
- The Ultimate Guide to Downloading Facebook Stories Anywhere
- The Ultimate Guide to HighPoint's Rocket 1608A Add-In Card – Revolutionary Drive Capacity & Performance Upgrade
- The Ultimate Listening Experience Awaits with Turtle Beach's Atlas Air Headphones – Discover the Difference!
- Tom's Tech Insights: Unraveling the Latest Computer Innovations
- Troubleshooting and Fixing Microsoft Antimalware Service's CPU Drain on Windows 10
- Ultimate Hardware Hub: Dive Into Tom's Tech Reviews Today
- Under-Budget Breeze Masters? Check Out Our Review of UpHere's C5C and D6Sec Coolers
- Unrecognized Writing Flaws by AI
- Unveiling the Latest in Hardware with Tom's Technology Hub
- Unveiling the Potency of Akasa Gecko's SSD Cooler: An Elite Blower Heatsink for Optimal Drive Performance
- Unveiling the Power of the White-Hued Maxsun Terminator Z790M D5 Ice – A Review on Its Five Flexible M.2 Ports
- Unveiling the Truth About Bluehost: A Comparative Look at Their Cloud, VPS & Shared Solutions
- Updated In 2024, Advanced Techniques to Purify Recorded Audio From Unwanted Echoes
- Viral Visions Top IG Story Filters for 2024
- What You Need To Know To Improve Your Oppo Reno 10 5G Hard Reset | Dr.fone
- Zen 5 Revolution: Unveiling the Power of AMD's Ryzen 5 9600X & Ryzen Pressing 7 9700X
- Title: ByteSavvy Insights: Unveiling the Top-Rated Electronics of the Year
- Author: Kevin
- Created at : 2024-08-18 11:59:24
- Updated at : 2024-08-19 11:59:24
- Link: https://hardware-reviews.techidaily.com/bytesavvy-insights-unveiling-the-top-rated-electronics-of-the-year/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.