Something about Kabylake.
http://benchlife.info/cannon-lake-postpone-and-kaby-lake-will-replace-skylake-in-2016-06232015/
2x128MB edram for SKL-H looks insane. Overall it looks to me like some sort of refresh. Chipset seems new (USB 3.1 for desktop).
- Quad-core Kabylake + 2x 128MB eDRAM GT4e iGPU (mobile/server)
- Quad-core Kabylake @ 35-65W TDP (locked), 91W TDP (K, unlocked)
- Quad-core Skylake + 64MB eDRAM GT4e iGPU @ 35-65W confirmed for LGA1151 desktops
What the fuzzle is going on?! Skylake isn't even out yet and we get this Kabylake 'leak' ^_^
I also wonder how this affects Cannonlake and Icelake launch roadmap. I believe they will skip Cannonlake in desktops now (similar to Broadwell) but mobile might get Cannonlake in early 2017.
I think KabyLake will have a relatively short lifetime. I suspect it is being released in order to allow OEMs to release compelling system updates for the back-to-school selling season with something better than just a rehashed Skylake.
I am working under the assumption that KabyLake, as mikk claims, has Gen. 10 GPU/media.
Also, when is intel going to go to high bandwidth memory, whatever their equivalent is, instead of edram. Using edram now gives them an edge compared to AMD, but it seems at best a limited stopgap measure, and will be a poor solution when AMD finally gets HBM on their APUs.
We still have to see when AMD will use HBM on APUs. But the answer is simple for both parties. When the economics allows it. And I think we are close to 2020 before that happens on the mainstream. And then its over with flexible memory. You buy a CPU with x GB. So for example (hypothetical) if you want 16GB you need an i7 or A10 CPU.
Purley looks to be using HMC.
i7-4950 eDRAM bandwidth is 50 GB/s. See this: http://www.anandtech.com/show/6993/intel-iris-pro-5200-graphics-review-core-i74950hq-tested/3By the way, how much bandwidth does 2x128MB eDRAM provides?
That does not seem like much as they get into gt4e.
How does HCM differ from HBM? Can Intel license HBM or it exclusive to AMD/Hynix?
That does not seem like much as they get into gt4e.
How does HCM differ from HBM? Can Intel license HBM or it exclusive to AMD/Hynix?
That does not seem like much as they get into gt4e.
How does HCM differ from HBM? Can Intel license HBM or it exclusive to AMD/Hynix?