Intel's Raptor Lake and AMD's Zen 4 are both on approach for a landing this fall. It's shaping up to be an epic battle between the CPU heavyweights, as Intel looks to add more efficiency cores and multi-threaded performance while AMD will launch an all-new platform, with socket AM5 being the first new socket in over five years. It's not just CPUs, as new GPUs are looking to get in on the excitement. Save up your pennies, as enthusiasts will have plenty of upgrades to consider in the coming months. 0:30 - News of the week 0:37 - US wants to block China and SMIC from using 14nm tech 2:44 - James Webb Space Telescope uses a 68GB SSD for storage 4:46 - Reports that TSMC and other foundries are facing order cancellations 8:54 - M.2 to SATA adapter from SilverStone 12:11 - Bitmain Antminer E9 Ethereum ASIC. Only $9,999, get yours now, before The Merge! 17:04 - GPU prices still coming down, Prime Day is over, next-gen incoming 17:43 - Intel Raptor Lake versus AMD Zen 4 this fall 18:25 - Raptor Lake core specs 19:59 - Early Raptor Lake benchmark leaks 24:58 - Tentative specs comparison of Raptor Lake and Zen 4 31:23 - AVX512 discussion, scheduling difficulties for heterogeneous architectures 35:25 - Intel demonstrated running Raptor Lake PC 36:00 - Intel's manufacturing roadmap, five nodes in four years 37:47 - Intel CPU roadmap: Raptor Lake, Meteor Lake, Arrow Lake, Lunar Lake, and beyond 41:43 - High level overview of process nodes and libraries, what to expect from Intel 4 43:56 - Raptor Lake overview, what's coming and what to expect 46:55 - Meteor Lake, perhaps Intel's "next Conroe moment," chip stacking 50:53 - Next generation integrated graphics, Arc coming to CPUs 52:23 - Intel's plans for the next few years, CPUs, GPUs, nodes, and more 57:58 - Is socket 1700 a dead end? What's socket 1800? 59:46 - Was socket AM4 sticking around so long good or bad? 1:04:31 - CPU failures, how many processors have we killed?