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Intel Skylake complete lineup - Coming in August - Pictures of CPU

Cloudfire777

Golden Member
Please visit the site that posted this to give them traffic
Source:http://benchlife.info/will-support-ddr4-and-ddr3l-10-skylake-model-confirm-and-hand-on-04232015/

At Computex 2015 Broadwell-H and Broadwell-S series processors will be published, which Broadwell-S for desktop and AIO with a product that will include an Intel Core i7-5775C, Intel Core i5-5675C, Intel Core i7-5775R , Core i5-5675R and Core i5-5575R.
Skylake-S will be officially published in IDF held in San Francisco in August (15th - )
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So the SKU leak from this turkish site was legit I would say. And we got even more SKUs now.
 
Looks like they increased the clocks from Haswell in the 35W lair.

The fastest 35W Haswell Quad is i7-4785T. It runs at 3.2GHz.
The fastest 35W Skylake Quad is i7-6700T now at 3.6GHz.

Strangely the 65W doesnt see a similar gain.
4790S can also run at 4.0GHz...

Maybe its because we compare the newest Skylake against the most mature Haswell CPUs that gone through a few silicon improvements to up the clocks?
 
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The 4790S will rarely hit 4Ghz (ST). And its baseclock is 3.2Ghz.

Plus the IPC of Skylake looks to be ~15% over Haswell. Plus IGP etc.
 
Looks like they increased the clocks from Haswell in the 35W lair.

The fastest 35W Haswell Quad is i7-4785T. It runs at 3.2GHz.
The fastest 35W Skylake Quad is i7-6700T now at 3.6GHz.



i7-4785T runs at 2.2 Ghz with Turbo up to 3.2 Ghz. Base clock is way higher on this Skylake.
 
Now if only we could get a whole architecture detail a la David Kanter style. Unless anyone knows of something similar already out?

I'm also curious of where people are getting the 15% figure.
 
3.4/4Ghz at 65W? Yes please!

Really impressive performance / watt with 2nd-gen 14nm, looks like.

I might be in for one (or two). Starting to see the limitations of my dual-core Haswell Pentium-AE CPU. Would like to go quad-core next (again, had C2Q CPUs for the longest time).

These release this year, right?
 
Really impressive performance / watt with 2nd-gen 14nm, looks like.

I might be in for one (or two). Starting to see the limitations of my dual-core Haswell Pentium-AE CPU. Would like to go quad-core next (again, had C2Q CPUs for the longest time).

These release this year, right?

August it seems.
 
Ok, so the usual 7% CPU performance increase or so is to be expected over previous generation?

And the lower performing SKUs at a little lower TDP, the higher performing a bit higher TDP, compared to previous generation it seems.
 
i7-4785T runs at 2.2 Ghz with Turbo up to 3.2 Ghz. Base clock is way higher on this Skylake.

The 4790S will rarely hit 4Ghz (ST). And its baseclock is 3.2Ghz.
Does a higher base clock really help with anything? 😕
If the Haswell`s can`t stay on specced turbo clocks, and Skylake can, well then its a big bonus for sure

Ok, so the usual 7% CPU performance increase or so is to be expected over previous generation?

And the lower performing SKUs at a little lower TDP, the higher performing a bit higher TDP, compared to previous generation it seems.
No, the performance gain seem to be around 20%.
If you look at ShintaiDK`s result, its 15% higher than the Haswell. Except that one run 200MHz higher than the Skylake.
So all in all we are maybe looking at +20%. Biggest in many years.
Will for sure be a good year to build a new rig 😎

Going to be expensive for the early adopters.
Meh DDR isnt that expensive right? Unless you bought those 4000MHz kits 😛
I guess DDR3L and DDR4 is Intel pushing for low energy footprint. Bet we will see that in their marketing slides
 
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So if I'm reading this correctly...

Broadwell for the desktop June 2 and Skylake August 15?

Seems too close together. I don't understand the marketing behind this. Can someone help me here?
 
So if I'm reading this correctly...

Broadwell for the desktop June 2 and Skylake August 15?

Seems too close together. I don't understand the marketing behind this. Can someone help me here?

Broadwell is only 2 Iris Pro SKUs it seems.
 
So if I'm reading this correctly...

Broadwell for the desktop June 2 and Skylake August 15?

Seems too close together. I don't understand the marketing behind this. Can someone help me here?
I`ve been wondering about the same but from Teh source of this thread:

Broadwell Intel Core i7-5775C with Intel Core i5-5675C works with Z97 chipset = No need to upgrade motherboard

The other 3 Broadwell`s:
i7-5775R + Core i5-5675R + Core i5-5575R
are all BGA, meaning soldered. Source say they are for AIO machines.

Skylake requires new motherboard. So I guess Broadwell is for OEMs that make AIO machines and for those who refuse to buy new motherboard.
 
So if I'm reading this correctly...

Broadwell for the desktop June 2 and Skylake August 15?

Seems too close together. I don't understand the marketing behind this. Can someone help me here?

Problems with the 14nm process basically delayed desktop Broadwell into oblivion. There isn't going to be a full Broadwell lineup, just a few specialized parts that don't seem to compete with anything in the Skylake lineup.
 
There never was to be a full Broadwell desktop line. Just the unlocked parts.

And expect the same with Cannonlake. Desktop is the last to a node.
 
There never was to be a full Broadwell desktop line. Just the unlocked parts.

And expect the same with Cannonlake. Desktop is the last to a node.

Yeah, that does seem to be the 'new normal'. It makes sense with tiny IPC gains for ticks and increased difficulty in ramping new nodes.
 
I`ve been wondering about the same but from Teh source of this thread:

Broadwell Intel Core i7-5775C with Intel Core i5-5675C works with Z97 chipset = No need to upgrade motherboard

The other 3 Broadwell`s:
i7-5775R + Core i5-5675R + Core i5-5575R
are all BGA, meaning soldered. Source say they are for AIO machines.

Skylake requires new motherboard. So I guess Broadwell is for OEMs that make AIO machines and for those who refuse to buy new motherboard.

That does make sense but it seems like the Broadwell upgrade for those with the Z97 chipset is such a small number when it comes to the numbers Intel regularly does.

Hey, I'm not complaining, more options is great. Performance-wise we'll just have to wait and see if these new parts hit the price/performance curve for our individual needs and wants.
 
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