ShintaiDK
Lifer
- Apr 22, 2012
- 20,378
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You know what I mean. The full hardware needed to do AVX-512 properly would be a waste on the mainstream CPU given the IGP.
What does AVX512 and IGP have to do with one another?
You know what I mean. The full hardware needed to do AVX-512 properly would be a waste on the mainstream CPU given the IGP.
Nice find there! So Coffee Lake is way more than Skylake/Kaby Lake on steroids. We're getting the complete package (CPU + iGPU architecture uodate) on top of 'more cores' (6C/12T).
What does AVX512 and IGP have to do with one another?
Hopefully it also hits around 4Ghz. 3.8Ghz perhaps as base. That's always the problem when moving up in core count. And we know ST performance matters.
One problem I see is that CFL 4+3e is probably about the same size as 6+2. I can't imagine that either would fly with Intel for their i3 and lower desktop, even cut. One possibility I guess would be some mixture of the Cannon Lake 2+2 die and a 4+2 die, either Coffee or Kaby rebrand.
http://www.fool.com/investing/2016/09/14/exclusive-the-secret-of-intel-corporations-coffee.aspx
Coffee Lake is Cannon Lake but on Intel 14nm process?
Yeah, a screenshot straight from Intel's website is so "unreliable"This site sounds unreliable for me......
Yeah, a screenshot straight from Intel's website is so "unreliable"![]()
Intel does not normally release two generations per year. Their PAO scheme means process, next year, architecture, next year optimization, next year back to process. So bringing uit two distinct 10nm products so close together does not make sense.Is there a proof (leaked Intel slide) that Coffee Lake really is 14nm and not 10nm ?
Coffee Lake could be just the code name for the bigger/high performance "Cannon Lake" SOC.
Is there a proof (leaked Intel slide) that Coffee Lake really is 14nm and not 10nm ?
Coffee Lake could be just the code name for the bigger/high performance "Cannon Lake" SOC.
If you think desktop, they did the exact same when 14nm begun. Broadwell for mobile only and Xeon-D more or less.
They didn't release a whole new lineup on 22 nm after releasing Broadwell though. The time gap is also much larger, you probably won't see Ice Lake on the desktop for at least a year after when Coffee launches.
They didn't release a whole new lineup on 22 nm after releasing Broadwell though
The time gap is also much larger, you probably won't see Ice Lake on the desktop for at least a year after when Coffee launches.
DigiTimes said:Intel reportedly is planning to add USB 3.1 and Wi-Fi functions into its motherboard chipsets and the new design may be implemented in its upcoming 300-series scheduled to be released at the end of 2017, according to sources from motherboard makers. Intel declined to comment on market speculation.
May be the desktop version comes earlier than the notebook version. I believe we see the same pattern for Kabylake, apparently Quadcore KBL for notebooks comes later. I wonder if CFL will be compatible with 200-series or even 100-series.
Because? Assuming that CFL is CNL in 14nm, I doubt it. Intel traditionally don't release a new socket for a tick generation because it's from the same (Skylake) µarch family with minor changes. I expect a new socket with Icelake.
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There is no indication that FIVR comes back for Cannonlake/Coffe Lake, what is your source? In fact there are reports that it comes back with Icelake generation. It is doubtful that Intel is changing this with CNL/CFL.