Huawei
Huawei Kirin PC chip might be delayed till Q1 2025
Huawei might delay the launch of its Kirin PC chip till Q1 2025. Many of us expected to see the brand’s first-ever computer-dedicated chip this year. But it looks like the company doesn’t want to hurry in making the best and most efficient PC processor.
A new leak suggests the uncertainty of the Kirin PC launch this year. Weibo tipster @BeijingDigitalMaster says that Huawei might delay the release of the Kirin PC chip by Q1 2025. And we have some reasons that justify the delay to some extent.
The Chinese OEM already has several major launches this year. For instance, this month will likely bring the Nova 13 series, a new MatePad tablet, the Sound X4, a smart Hi MateBook laptop, and of course, the HarmonyOS NEXT public beta program.
Next month is also seemingly full of big surprises like the stable HarmonyOS NEXT rollout, the flagship Mate 70 series, the Mate X6 dual-foldable phone, and more.
Huawei might have saved some interesting offerings for December as well. Thus, there are chances that the company may unveil its computer-dedicated software and chip in early 2025. Though the tech giant hasn’t mentioned any details on this matter.
A recent leak said that Huawei may launch the HarmonyOS PC in the next six months. Perhaps the company may debut the Kirin PC chip at the same time.
Early inputs predicted that the Kirin PC would follow the Apple M-series chip architecture. This framework includes all the main parts like DRAMs and SoCs in one package, doubling the memory bandwidth and performance efficiency. Read More…
Apart from the new CPU architecture, the chipset is also expected to bring the latest AI features for notebooks, making them a smarter upgrade over previous versions.
The Kirin PC will also focus on better thermal control capabilities. Being the first self-developed laptop chip, it could be slightly less power efficient than the phone processors. Although Huawei may bring better changes in the time ahead.
You can check more news and details of the Kirin PC chip HERE.
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