Discussion Intel Meteor, Arrow, Lunar & Panther Lakes Discussion Threads

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Tigerick

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As Hot Chips 34 starting this week, Intel will unveil technical information of upcoming Meteor Lake (MTL) and Arrow Lake (ARL), new generation platform after Raptor Lake. Both MTL and ARL represent new direction which Intel will move to multiple chiplets and combine as one SoC platform.

MTL also represents new compute tile that based on Intel 4 process which is based on EUV lithography, a first from Intel. Intel expects to ship MTL mobile SoC in 2023.

ARL will come after MTL so Intel should be shipping it in 2024, that is what Intel roadmap is telling us. ARL compute tile will be manufactured by Intel 20A process, a first from Intel to use GAA transistors called RibbonFET.



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Intel Core Ultra 100 - Meteor Lake

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As mentioned by Tomshardware, TSMC will manufacture the I/O, SoC, and GPU tiles. That means Intel will manufacture only the CPU and Foveros tiles. (Notably, Intel calls the I/O tile an 'I/O Expander,' hence the IOE moniker.)



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AcrosTinus

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I might be coping but this generation is a reset and I will give Intel the benefit of the doubt and believe them.
Hopefully this will turn out like Zen1 and lead to significantly better products in the future.
I bought ARL because I will tune it and it will be as fast or faster than my sold 12900K and 13700K but with more than 50% more MT performance.

I hopfe for Intel's sake that Patherlake or whatever is an iteration that takes the input from the market into account.
 
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gdansk

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I might be coping but this generation is a reset and I will give Intel the benefit of the doubt and believe them.
Hopefully this will turn out like Zen1 and lead to significantly better products in the future.
I bought ARL because I will tune it and it will be as fast or faster than my sold 12900K and 13700K but with more than 50% more MT performance.

I hopfe for Intel's sake Patherlake or whatever is a iteration that take the input from the market into account.
What's like a reset about this? It's just refinements of Meteor Lake...
 

511

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I might be coping but this generation is a reset and I will give Intel the benefit of the doubt and believe them.
Hopefully this will turn out like Zen1 and lead to significantly better products in the future.
I bought ARL because I will tune it and it will be as fast or faster than my sold 12900K and 13700K but with more than 50% more MT performance.

I hopfe for Intel's sake Patherlake or whatever is a iteration that take the input from the market into account.
Nope it is a disaster a Mobile Product forced on Desktops
 

RTX2080

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Jul 2, 2018
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I guess a fair comparison point for Arrowlake would be Meteorlake then, not Raptorlake. But I can't imagine that Arrowlake doesn't have any improvements in its tile based design. What made Intel call off Meteorlake's launch on desktop, but proceed to not sufficiently improve the successor for a desktop launch either?
What memory/latency tests do you see ARL specifically not looking good that would cause the low scores we are seeing in these memory sensitive applications?

David huang did SPECint on ARL and said L3 latency is the most to blame which has already been there in Meteorlake as well, and from my knowledge it's also be a root cause of poor performance in gaming and latency sensitive applications. I would assume that high L3/memory latency are the characteristic of this design.

From his test 265k SPECint is a bit slower than 13900k from previous data which might indicate having similar issue like being in Meteorlake and already cause IPC regression on RedwoodCove.


If that's the case there would be nothing to be 'fix' in the future just like Meteorlake.

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511

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Apparently, some Twitter/X users seem to have nailed the issue. Looks like scheduling which eventually leads to latency due to inadvertent E core scheduling.



https://x.com/CapFrameX/status/1849138027005718775
The huge mess continues... I thought "wait what if its VBS causing issues", turns out memory integrity was disabled by default.

Enabling it boosted performance further... I'm just gonna shut it off for the day and go get something to eat. 😂
 

OneEng2

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Sep 19, 2022
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It's 2026H2. Or later. It can always be later.

I checked a few sources. Even the most pessimistic are estimating launch in late 2025 with production in Jan 2026. Most are saying mid 2025. Do you have a source on the 2026 H2 or later?

H2 2025 aligns with TSMC's N2 process release as well:

 

Saylick

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I checked a few sources. Even the most pessimistic are estimating launch in late 2025 with production in Jan 2026. Most are saying mid 2025. Do you have a source on the 2026 H2 or later?

H2 2025 aligns with TSMC's N2 process release as well:

How can they launch in late 2025 if production isn't until 2026...? Usually, production starts a few months prior to the launch. Did you mean production in mid-2025 with launch in late 2025?
 

Hitman928

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ARL really looks like a mobile processor rebranded as desktop without reasonable optimizations - low bus throughput, low cache throughput, high cache latency... everything goes for saving power.
Maybe turn off ALL power saving features in BIOS? Those C states and anything else that allows the cores to race to idle?
 

Hulk

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I might be coping but this generation is a reset and I will give Intel the benefit of the doubt and believe them.
Hopefully this will turn out like Zen1 and lead to significantly better products in the future.
I bought ARL because I will tune it and it will be as fast or faster than my sold 12900K and 13700K but with more than 50% more MT performance.

I hopfe for Intel's sake that Patherlake or whatever is an iteration that takes the input from the market into account.
I think you are looking at "reset" like I am. Reset in terms of performance expectations in "resetting the bar" in the move from monolithic to tiled and bringing clocks back to reality. As I've been droning on and on about.. Intel worked themselves into a corner by pushing clocks into the stratosphere trying to compete with AMD. Now they are paying the price.
 

gdansk

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I checked a few sources. Even the most pessimistic are estimating launch in late 2025 with production in Jan 2026. Most are saying mid 2025. Do you have a source on the 2026 H2 or later?

H2 2025 aligns with TSMC's N2 process release as well:

My source is myself. Zen 6 is ~22 months after Zen 5 like it was ~22 months after Zen 4 like it was ~22 months after Zen 3.

Some sources also said 2027Q1 but that is so awful I refuse to believe it.

The timing of Panther Lake and Arrow Lake Refresh (if it isn't cancelled) are more open questions.
 
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Saylick

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Re: VBS affecting performance.

This launch has been so bad... There's just no consistency between generations on what settings give you the best performance. What I want to know now is if consumers actually like having to tune their CPU to extract max performance... Maybe it's just me getting older and not having the time, so I start to prefer great performance out of the box. If this trend continues for Intel CPUs where you now need to wait a few months after every launch for Intel, Microsoft, and enthusiasts to figure out what are the Right Settings™, it feels like that would just annoy the consumer.

 
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RTX2080

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How about slower RAM running at CL24 and tightest subtimings?
Well I'm not professional in tuning, but I saw some enthusiasts trying to boost ARL with extreme tuning like memOC, turning on/off settings in BIOS, switching perf profile in windows, OC the ring, and E-cores above 5Ghz, you might have good results but the power consumption is much higher as a consequence. I guess lowering CL doesn't help much.
 
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Both Intel and AMD need to pressure Microsoft to make it easier for consumers to get the best performance out of their CPUs with a single button click, using whatever chipset drivers or any other solution they can come up with. If Microsoft refuses, Intel/AMD should join forces to create their own official x86 distro to scare the hell out of Microsoft into becoming more humble.
 

Doug S

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Why would they change the numbering of the cores? That had to be deliberate, but I can't think of any reason why.

Maybe the right question is, where does that numbering come from? Is that something innate to the CPU (i.e. comes from CPUID like instructions) or is it getting that from the BIOS? Or does Windows number them, and something about the way Windows accomplishes that is different - like maybe in past designs at power on/reset first the P cores then the E cores are spun up and identified by the OS but with Arrow Lake they alternate between P and E cores in the order they come online?
 

Josh128

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Zen 5 had a similar issue during launch. Only after Microsoft fixed it with a Windows patch, things turned out to be fine. Same or similar solution probably applies here.

This is certainly plausible. Even Alder Lake had similar issues at launch, even with its massive IPC upgrade from Rocket Lake/Comet Lake.

Zen 5 and Arrow Lake are so remarkably similar in performance, price, power consumption, and disastrous / embarrassing launches that its almost like Lisa and Pat collaborated on how to make their respective new CPUs baffle folks every step of the way.

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