Intel Panther Lake press Q&A transcript — EVO is still alive, and the company ditches prior-generation naming scheme

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Intel
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Following Intel's keynote at CES 2026, where it formally launched consumer Panther Lake products, our resident CPU reporter Jake Roach attended a press Q&A at CES in Las Vegas, featuring some of the senior staff behind Intel's Panther Lake architecture. The following article is a transcript of that Q&A session. We've edited some elements for flow and clarity, and have made notes where we couldn't quite make out what was being said. As speakers did not introduce themselves at the beginning of our transcript, we have denoted them as Journalists, denoted in the sequence that they spoke in.

Some highlights include Intel being particularly proud of making the lineup significantly easier to understand, combining the benefits of Arrow Lake and Lunar Lake, while also making fewer SKU denotations, making the lineup easier to parse as a whole. Additionally, while Intel did not announce any EVO processors at CES 2026, the company is still keeping the brand alive, with 'stricter' qualifications in place for the future.

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Sayem Ahmed
Subscription Editor

Sayem Ahmed is the Subscription Editor at Tom's Hardware. He covers a broad range of deep dives into hardware, both new and old, including the CPUs, GPUs, and everything else that uses a semiconductor. He has worked as a professional tech journalist since 2015 and has written for Gamespot, IGN, and Dexerto.

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