
Over
 the past few years, laptop have gotten much thinner and lighter — but 
not much quieter. Whether you have an ultra-thin design or something 
bulkier, the whirring fan has been a computer owner's constant 
companion, turning on whenever you start to tax the processor even a 
little bit outside its comfort zone.
Intel
 is attacking this problem head-on with its Core M processor, which 
allows PC and tablet manufacturers to build products with laptop 
performance in a thin and fanless form factor.
The
 photo above shows the motherboard for a MacBook Air underneath a 
motherboard with the same performance, but built around a Core M chip. 
Not only will the new chips let laptops and tablets get even thinner, 
but they'll have twice the performance, Intel says. Reps from the 
company showed Mashable a 12-inch prototype Windows tablet thinner than 
an iPad Air, but with twice the performance, they added.
The
 Core M bridges the gap between the company's line of Atom processors, 
which are used in mobile devices, and the main Core line — the 
high-power chips that you'd find in laptops and some tablets. 
Previously, Intel provided lower-power Core chips for ultra-thin 
designs; Core M replaces that line.
Core
 M can run faster without getting too hot, thanks to Intel's 
14-nanometer chip technology (Moore's Law hasn't quit just yet). Whereas
 the previous low-power Core chips ran at 11.5 watts, Core M runs at 4.5
 — a significant decrease, and without any reduction in performance.
Intel
 says the Core M is targeted at the "high end" of the tablet market as 
well as Ultrabooks. Many manufacturers have already unveiled products 
built around Core M at IFA, including the Asus Zenbook UX305, the HP 
Envy x2 and the new Lenovo ThinkPad Helix. Intel says more than 20 Core 
M-based products are in the works, many to be unveiled in the coming 
months and early next year.
While
 some PCs and tablets with power demands will always require a fan (the 
Microsoft Surface Pro, which prioritizes productivity above all else, 
will likely stick with a full Core chip), the Core M can take over a 
significant part of the market. And that whirring fan you hear whenever 
you fire up multiple dynamic browser tabs may finally start to shut up.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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