It's pretty neat. I just hope that OEMs put it into good systems that make the correct user experience focused trade offs.
The OEMs need to drop the super high resolution panels (esp. since Windows DPI scaling is pretty bad) which drain battery life as well as the crazy obsession with paper-thin, and instead focus on better touch pads, sturdier industrial design, and higher quality displays (color, viewing angles, etc.)
Yep OEM choices matter more than the single part now, I'm looking at Broadwell-Y and whoever choose to put a 4K display with it... just use a good quality 1080P, even the new power saving variant (I dont remember the name at all) would be great for a premium price.
The process power reduction should allow for 50% gains on the GPU. I'm not seeing this so either BW is using much less power or something else is happening.
20% with node shrink at the same TDP is downright pathetic.
I am baffled too by the weird CPU increase: mostly base clocks gains, big ones, but looking thorough the charts there are also decreases in max turbo sometimes...
Then the new 5y71 chip even has a 2.9GHz turbo in a 4.5W TDP so I'm really speechless when a 15W part is limited to 3ish or a few bins more.
Maybe it's all marketing and they (Intel) are going to release much better variants in the future?
Stress tests shoud give a better picture: just think how long they could keep those turbo speed up vs the much more limited -y variant.