Article 6EY1P Intel’s biggest laptop CPU update in years is a huge departure from past designs

Intel’s biggest laptop CPU update in years is a huge departure from past designs

by
Andrew Cunningham
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6EY1P)
Intel-Core-Ultra-Meteor-Lake-1-800x450.j

Enlarge / An Intel Meteor Lake processor, which will come to market under the "Core" and "Core Ultra" banners later this year. (credit: Intel)

Intel's next-generation Meteor Lake laptop processors are nearing release-the company announced this week that the first processors will launch on December 14. It's unclear whether actual Core and Core Ultra systems will be available to buy on that date, but at a bare minimum, the official announcement will pave the way to many laptop announcements at CES in January.

We already know a lot of basic facts about Meteor Lake; it uses a combination of chiplets manufactured by both Intel and TSMC rather than a single monolithic die, and it will mark the retirement of Intel's nth-generation" and i3/i5/i7/i9 branding. We also know that it won't be ready for desktops and that the next round of Core desktop CPUs will be very similar to the 12th- and 13th-generation chips.

But at Intel's Innovation event this week, the company dove a little deeper into some of Meteor Lake's advancements, describing more about how the chips would balance E-cores and P-cores and announcing its most substantial integrated GPU upgrade in years. We'll hit some highlights below, though it's worth watching or reading the full presentation to find out more.

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