Hulk
Diamond Member
- Oct 9, 1999
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I know Intel 4 is ~ 7nm. Will they have a product that is ~3-4nm or are they jumping to Intel 20, which I believe is supposed to equate to ~2nm?
With all of the process issues Intel has had since 14nm you've got to admit they squeeze every last bit of performance out of a process once they sink their teeth into it.
Just look at Rocket Lake, the best an last Intel 14nm silicon vs. Raptor Lake in it's latest iteration on Intel 7.
I like this but have a slightly different take.
Yes, 14th gen will be Raptor Refresh on the desktop and Meteor Lake mobile.
But then I predict that Intel (as usual) will fall in love with the yields that are finally occurring with Intel 4 and 15th generation in 2025 will be a Meteor Lake Refresh that include better, lower voltage mobile parts as well as high clock speed desktop parts.
Of course this course would mean that AMD has given them enough rope to slow down.
If Zen 5 appears as promised then there will be some scrambling at Intel and those results are always hard to predict!
With all of the process issues Intel has had since 14nm you've got to admit they squeeze every last bit of performance out of a process once they sink their teeth into it.
Just look at Rocket Lake, the best an last Intel 14nm silicon vs. Raptor Lake in it's latest iteration on Intel 7.
I agree it makes for an awkward lineup and branding, but Intel's only alternative would be to launch 14th gen and 15th gen desktop simultaneously, which would be confusing in its own right. My bet is we'll see 14th gen launch as a combo of MTL mobile parts and RPL refreshes for filler, and then 15th gen as LNL (premium mobile), ARL (mobile and higher end desktop), and MTL (low end desktop).
I like this but have a slightly different take.
Yes, 14th gen will be Raptor Refresh on the desktop and Meteor Lake mobile.
But then I predict that Intel (as usual) will fall in love with the yields that are finally occurring with Intel 4 and 15th generation in 2025 will be a Meteor Lake Refresh that include better, lower voltage mobile parts as well as high clock speed desktop parts.
Of course this course would mean that AMD has given them enough rope to slow down.
If Zen 5 appears as promised then there will be some scrambling at Intel and those results are always hard to predict!
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