How about:
14nm "Sunny Cove" based Rocket Lake with 10nm Gen 11 iGPU? 12-16 cores. At possible 260-280mm2 it would be the largest client die since Bloomfield!
There's still a good chance for 14nm CPU chiplets & updated arch, but your vote is still in the race and that's an amazing feat considering the odds.
My guess is that Intel earn revenues every time anyone has to use the + symbol on their keyboards. 😛
Rocket Lake S is indeed in Q2 2021, but on the SIPP / commercial roadmap which seems to have delayed entries relative to normal desktop/mobile roadmaps. Together with the Rocket Lake Xeon E mentioned for a Q1 2021 launch on the same roadmap, there's a good chance for a late 2020 Rocket Lake introduction to the general public, even if that means a paper launch.If those leaked roadmaps are to be believed, Rocket Lake doesn't show up on the desktop at all in 2020. Maybe never. For desktop, it's Comet Lake. And we know what that is, don't we?
Why would Intel "accelerate timelines as much as possible" now but not have done so earlier? The danger is increasingly obvious since 2017 I'd say, can we reasonably expect Intel to have gone "all's fine" until now?we can also reasonably expect Intel to accelerate timelines as much as possible once AMD turns up the heat this summer.
There's a difference between management/marketing/engineers understanding the gravity of the situation and investors understanding the gravity of the situation.Why would Intel "accelerate timelines as much as possible" now but not have done so earlier? The danger is increasingly obvious since 2017 I'd say, can we reasonably expect Intel to have gone "all's fine" until now?
Why would Intel "accelerate timelines as much as possible" now but not have done so earlier?
Oh, you meant Intel may soon have to put up the act of "accelerating timelines" in place of the current act of "steady yearly improvements" since the investors are finally getting wind of the gravity of the situation? In that case I agree.There's a difference between management/marketing/engineers understanding the gravity of the situation and investors understanding the gravity of the situation.
The pressure at Intel will mount to such unbearable levels in the next year you'll be able to make diamonds in there. They will squeeze months out of thin air, rules be damned.
Those are technicalities, "nobody" (certainly not the stock market so far) cares about these. 😉Because they thought they would actually fix 10 nm at some point. The lead time to do a backport like this is long... they might release Rocket Lake ASAP but that might be the very end of 20. If it's Willow Cove based, it should be not so bad albeit quite toasty.
Soo far Intel is playing the confidence game. I was surprised to see nothing about 7nm EUV in Intel’s last earnings call, not even questions from large investors. Apparently, there is 'nothing to see here', every thing is fine. Bah.Oh, you meant Intel may soon have to put up the act of "accelerating timelines" in place of the current act of "steady yearly improvements" since the investors are finally getting wind of the gravity of the situation? In that case I agree.
I am surprised AMD keeps launching new arch with desktops.
AMD seems to be eager to keep up with the steady node progress the pure play foundries are making, that alone may allow AMD to get/stay ahead of Intel (not only in desktop but all markets they cover).I am surprised AMD keeps launching new arch with desktops.
Oh, you meant Intel may soon have to put up the act of "accelerating timelines" in place of the current act of "steady yearly improvements" since the investors are finally getting wind of the gravity of the situation?