Some thoughts about the latest round of leaks from this week:
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Skylake-X schedule moved up, now launching at Computex according to BenchLife
Skylake-X is probably the most exciting HEDT product coming from Intel since the original Core i7, and I'm sure they want to make an impact here. One friend told me some applications/games are seeing 10-15% performance per clock increase compared to original Skylake, that's probably because of the new cache architecture and quad-channel DDR4. Expect the entry level 6C/12T to become a very attractive all-around choice for productivity and high-refresh/multi GPU gaming choice.
Also, unless I'm mising something, this is the first time Intel mentions 'LCC' next to one of their HEDT codenames. I wouldn't be surprised if they are planning a special 'MCC' version of it with even higher core count. BenchLife hinted 10C SKL-X would not be their X SKU and than an italian blog reiterated the rumors about 12C SKL-X.
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Coffee Lake-S moved up to Q4-2017
This one come from the same article as above. I read Q4-2017 here the same way as Q4-2016 for Kaby Lake. You could buy one, but official launch was shortly after, during CES. Still, that's a lot sooner than we though. Other reports, except a 2016 DigiTimes article, meantioned CFL-S/CFL-H in Q2-2018 so we're talking 3-6+ months earlier than expected. Bringing 6C to mainstream will allow them to increase core/thread count on every segment. Don't be surprised if we get 4C/8T or even 6C/6T Core i5 and a 4C/4T Core i3. This will close the gap in productivity with the competition in a dramatic way and if they manage to retain or perhaps even increase 1-4 thread Turbo with the new 14nm++ process gaming performance should be stellar.
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Cannon Lake SiSoftware entry shows a 48 EUs integrated GPU (twice as big as Kaby Lake's)
While it's only a single entry, and there's some detail wrong - Cannon Lake is listed as Gen 9 when we know (previous GFXBench leak) it's a Gen 10 product - the prospect of Intel doubling graphics resources is exciting. That means significant performance boost for small/thin laptops where yu can't have a discrete GPU (except exotic external dGPU solutions). Don't forget:
- Broadwell, Skylake and Kaby Lake all packed 24 EUs in their GT2 configuration
- Bigger GPUs operating at lower clocks are usually more efficient than small ones at high clocks
- Skylake-Y as a 2C+GT2 is tiny (only 98.5 mm²!), now imagine that on a much denser 10nm process
- At 10nm even if they double the iGPU for every tier they will still have small dies
- Leaving the higher core count products to 14nm++ (Kaby Lake Refresh and Coffee Lake-S/H) makes perfect sense because of their performance profile
- If past is any indication Ice Lake-S could end up with the an updated 48 EUs iGPU as well
- Apple and the whole industry is pushing graphics performance in mobile
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Ice Lake shows up at Geekbench
This one caught me by surprise and so far no one answered my question. Is it expected to have functional ES for chips so far from launch? Unless Intel pulls a Broadwell/Skylake here and Ice Lake actually replaces Cannon Lake for mobile later in the same year (2018). Perhaps a CES 2019 launch for desktop Ice Lake is not far fetched?
The leak also shows 48KB L1 Data Cache, 12MB L3 and apparently LPDDR4/4x support. If GB isn't misreading the specs, and assuming this is their Ice Lake-U SKU, that's 3x the amount of L3 cache as their current designs (Core i7-7500U has 4MB L3). Cache size don't match any previous Intel product, even Skylake-SP/Skylake-X. I guess core segmentation (client x server) already began.
Intel launches "Kaby Lake-G" that integrates HBM 2 and AMD GPU die within the year
I'm taking this one with a grain of salt, but the prospect of having a 14nm++ (?) Skylake cores next to a Radeon GPU is interesting from a technical point of view. Would HBM 2 improve CPU performance? Regarding graphics performance, don't forget Apple is using a highly binned version and lower clocks to reach their 35W TDP target, bread and butter mobile Polaris 11 for gaming laptops is actually 75W TDP. According to BenchLife there's two SKUs (65W and 100W TDP), that's not a lot of power to play with, but I have little doubt it will still outperform an improved version of Iris Pro 580 (48 EUs + eDRAM, Gen 9). We need to confirm if this is real and how it works first.