Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Are you over the eclipse? Watch Intel’s 8th Gen Core launch at 8 a.m. Pacific

Add as a preferred source on Google

As promised, Intel is formally introducing its new family of eighth-generation processors today at 8 a.m. Pacific Time / 11 a.m. Eastern Time as the solar eclipse begins its blazing trail across the United States. You can watch the 8th Gen Intel Core livestream right here at Digital Trends, but it’s also streaming live on Intel’s Facebook page, and its online Newsroom.

“Hear directly from Gregory Bryant, senior vice president of the Client Computing Group at Intel, and others about the details on the latest processor family and what it can help you do,” the company said prior to its 8th Gen Intel Core livestream. “See the power of 8th Gen Intel Core technology come to life in the hands of a VR creator and imaging technologist.”

Recommended Videos

Intel’s eighth-generation launch begins before the company concludes its current Core X-Series processor roll-out for the enthusiast market. Intel will launch its $1,200 12-core processor later this month, and then its 14-core ($1,400), 16-core ($1,700) and 18-core ($2,000) chips at the end of 2017. These will require Intel’s large LGA 2066 motherboard socket (seat), and its new X299 motherboard chipsets.

But with Intel’s new eighth-generation processors, the company is keeping the same LGA 1151 motherboard seat used by its seventh-generation “Kaby Lake” processors, and its sixth-generation “Skylake” processors. The eighth-generation chips also won’t be anywhere near as expensive, but they may require a new motherboard if Intel doesn’t provide an update to support eighth-generation processors on motherboards with seventh-generation 200 Series “Kaby Lake” chipsets installed.

“Get a sneak peek at some of the amazing system designs based on 8th Gen Intel Core processors,” Intel added. “Start planning for what new 8th Gen Intel Core processor-based device to purchase in the holiday season and even before.”

Lots of rumors have swirled around what Intel may possibly reveal during its show. Desktop processors are a possible topic, and perhaps even chips that will be showcased in new laptops introduced during the IFA 2017 technology show in Berlin. We’re rather excited to see what Intel has planned, and what it’s eighth-generation processor design will bring to the PC market.

As Intel teases, amazing happens when all things align, but you won’t need special glasses to watch Intel’s shiny new reveal.

Kevin Parrish
Kevin started taking PCs apart in the 90s when Quake was on the way and his PC lacked the required components. Since then…
Apple’s Hide My Email feature has an unfixed bug that leaves email addresses exposed
100% exploitable in limited testing, known since June 2025, and still unfixed as of today.
apple-merging-sign-in-with-apple-hide-my-email-icloud+

Apple has been selling Hide My Email to keep your real email address hidden, but it has a vulnerability that does the exact opposite. The worst part is that the company has known about it for a year. 

Hide My Email, part of Apple’s paid iCloud+ subscription, lets users generate anonymous email addresses for signing up to a website, so that their personal or work email remains free of promotional emails and spam. 

Read more
I hate sharing my Mac, but a face-unlocking app finally cured my privacy paranoia
Someone finally built the app locker every Mac user has been asking for.
FaceGate in action on Mac

If you have ever handed your Mac to a friend, family member, or coworker for "just a minute," you know the mild panic that follows. Sure, your Mac has a lock screen, but once someone is past it, they can open Messages, Photos, Notes, Mail, WhatsApp, and your browser.

iPhones had the same issue, but Apple solved it by adding an app lock feature with the iOS 18 update. Sadly, no such feature exists for macOS. That’s where the new FaceGate app for Mac can help you. It’s a free and open-source app that lets you lock apps on your Mac and even has some novel tricks up its sleeve. So, let’s talk about it, shall we?

Read more
The charm of a tiny Windows tablet is apparently dead at Microsoft. Long live the Surface Go!
Microsoft’s budget Surface era may be over
Microsoft Surface Go 3 stand.

Microsoft might be cleaning up its Surface lineup. According to Windows Central, Microsoft has stopped manufacturing the Surface Go and Surface Laptop Go lines, with no successors currently planned. Surface Go 4 and Surface Laptop Go 3 are reportedly out of stock in most places, and once remaining retail stock is gone, that may be it.

If this is true, then we are looking at the end of the brand's budget Surface PCs as Microsoft has plenty of premium Windows hardware.

Read more