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Intel is in a tough spot. Qualcomm is comparing to Intel’s current Meteor Lake chips, and lots of the numbers . But — and that its just-around-the-corner will outshine Qualcomm’s Arm-based Snapdragon X Elite.

“Our mission with Lunar Lake is we wanted to build the most power-efficient x86 architecture there is — period. And we’re feeling pretty confident,” said Intel’s Dan Rogers in . That’s great, but Lunar Lake isn’t out today.



Intel spent many months talking up the current Meteor Lake platform, promising that it would be more power-efficient and enable local AI experiences with its Intel even transformed its processor naming scheme starting with Meteor Lake — these were the first “Core Ultra” chips. Now, Qualcomm is about to release the first wave of Snapdragon X Elite-powered laptops, ushering in . But Intel wants you comparing it to the Lunar Lake hardware launching in the coming months — not the Meteor Lake hardware you can buy today.

Meteor Lake’s battery life gains weren’t the big leap we expected I’ve been here at PCWorld, and many of them have Meteor Lake CPUs in them. As than the previous-generation , I would expect to see big battery life gains generation-over-generation. That hasn’t always panned out.

Many Meteor Lake laptops have similar levels of battery life to their Raptor Lake ancestors. Some even have worse battery life — the Meteor Lake-powered actually had lower battery life than the previous-generation Raptor Lake-pow.

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