OREANDA-NEWS. June 01, 2016.  Dual-core, quad-core, octa-core -- chipset manufacturers have been boosting your processing power in leaps and bounds in recent years. But now Intel is going one better with the next-generation Broadwell-E chip family, its first ever 10-core desktop processor.

(You heard right, Intel is going for "10-core" in its branding here, ditching the logical naming progression to "deca-core." Apparently, with speeds like this, we don't need Latin.)

The company is targeting power users with its next "Extreme Edition" of Core i7 chips, saying they've been designed with gamers, VR fans, content creators and overclockers in mind. Intel calls these users "mega-taskers." Apparently if you're still just multitasking then you're doing it wrong.

While Intel is talking the "extreme" talk, the company is more focused on iteration than revolution after announcing last year that it would be ditching its "Tick-Tock" product cycle in favor of a "Process, Architecture, Optimization" model.

Intel has traditionally alternated between announcing a shrinking of its chips in one year (tick), followed by the release of updated chips that use a new microarchitecture in the same footprint (tock).