Intel launches "first hybrid AI-ready" Core Series 3 mobile processors for budget PCs

Intel today unveiled its new Intel Core Series 3 mobile processors (codenamed Wildcat Lake) for home users seeking value for money, small businesses, and edge deployments, promising improved performance, battery life, and built-in AI capabilities.

Speaking of AI, the announcement is meant to mark Intel’s push to bring “AI-ready” computing to more affordable systems. As such the new lineup is being touted as Intel’s first “hybrid AI-ready” Core Series platform supporting up to 40 platform TOPS for AI tasks. The chips also introduce modern connectivity features including support for up to two Thunderbolt 4 ports, Wi-Fi 7, and Bluetooth 6.

If you are wondering, the new chips are built on the same 18A or 2nm lithography as the previously released Intel Core Ultra Series 3 (code-named Panther Lake).

Intel is positioning Core Series 3 mobile CPUs as a significant upgrade for users on a typical five-year refresh cycle. Compared to PCs from that era, the company claims up to 47% better single-thread performance and up to 41% higher multi-thread performance, alongside as much as 2.8x improved GPU AI performance. These gains, Intel says, enable “a new class of systems” aimed at everyday productivity and AI-assisted workloads.

In terms of power efficiency, Intel says the chips are designed for all-day battery life, with up to 64% lower processor power consumption compared to previous-gen parts. In productivity and content creation workloads, the company claims up to 2.1x faster performance, along with up to 2.7x AI GPU improvements over Intel Core 7 150U processors.

Beyond traditional PCs, Intel is also targeting edge deployments such as robotics, smart buildings, point-of-sale terminals, and smart metering. The chips are engineered to balance performance and efficiency across these use cases with integrated AI acceleration for tasks like vision and speech processing.

In comparison to competing platforms, Intel says its Core 7 350 processor delivers up to 1.5x higher object detection performance and up to 1.9x faster image classification than the Nvidia Jetson Orin Nano, along with up to 2.2x better video analytics performance.

The full lineups for PC and Edge are given below:

In terms of availability, mobile systems powered by Core Series 3 processors are set to roll out globally starting today (April 16, 2026), with wider availability expected across consumer and commercial devices in Q2 2026. Intel says these processors are designed to scale across laptops, notebooks, and edge devices, with more than 70 designs from partners set to launch in the coming months.

Report a problem with article
Next Article

Samsung evolves Audio Eraser into real-time sound control on Galaxy S26

Previous Article

Edifier R1280T and Klipsch R-80SWi are really good deals for limited time only