Intel Comet Lake Specs Leak - 10 cores, New Socket and 14nm+++

The naming scheme is grim if that's true, all those digits are a bit extreme now. If anyones wondering how much space they'd save from dropping the iGPU though, here's an annotated die shot of a Coffee Lake 8 core, easily enough for 2 extra cores and almost 4(Though there's probably power & heat headroom reasons for them not wanting to go to 12 cores on a mainstream platform on 14nm):

coffee_lake_die_%28octa_core%29_%28annotated%29.png
 
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The addition of SMT to the entire lineup also removes the artificial segmentation that Intel has given over the past decade by leaving Hyperthreading as an exclusive to the company's highest-end CPU models.

Is it just me or isn’t SMT an AMD thing? And Intel using Hyper-Threading?...
 
Hyper-Threading is a brand/marketing name for SMT(Well, Intel's implementation of SMT). SMT itself is a concept that dates back to the 60's.
 
Have they fixed the security flaws?
Nope otherwise we would be seeing marketing about how they have completely redesigned HT for you!
which is nothing short of what they need to do to fix these. but lets just sweep zombieloader's under the carpet shall we....
 
$179 for 4/8 and $229 for 6/12 with 4.8GHz boost clock would be amazing value for gaming.


But i9-10900KF with 14nm+++ technology doesn't quite roll of the tongue so easily. :lol: The pricing is lower than I'd expect from Intel to be honest, and naming scheme is pretty ridiculous. Seems pretty fake - kerning is off when you compare 10800F's core count to others etc.
 
Sort the security issues, bring out something actually new and stop behaving like a monopoly and maybe Intel will start to get back in people's good graces.

I'm well aware that in gaming (which is my primary focus) Intel is still arguably king but am prob going to upgrade to Ryzen because AMD have impressed me far far more
 
4.6 GHz turbo on 10 cores, this thing is going to get warm, 5.2Ghz turbo single...

Intel trying to claw back some single threaded benchmark wins.
 
4.6 GHz turbo on 10 cores, this thing is going to get warm, 5.2Ghz turbo single...

Intel trying to claw back some single threaded benchmark wins.

Even with 10 cores at that speed the 16 core AMD will behead it I reckon.

Never in a million years did I *ever* think AMD would be where they are right now. Ever.

I mean, I knew Jim Keller was good but man......

It's totally like the hare and the tortoise.
 
The new socket thing is annoying, but this is a fast CPU if specifications are to be believed.

I said this on Facebook and it seemed to go down surprisingly well, but the media and consumers loved the 5960X came out 4-5 years ago. It was £1000, only boosted to 3.5Ghz or thereabouts, couldn't overclock any higher than 4.3/4.4Ghz, and had 8 cores. This is £500, has 10 cores, and boosts to 5.2Ghz. Overclocking is probably going to be good too. That's not bad. Of course, Intel never would have done this if AMD hadn't released Zen, but still. The hatred I'm seeing across the net seems a bit much to me. There is no denying this is looking to be a fast CPU.
 
It would be interesting to see Intel 7nm vs AMD 7nm considering Intel are still ahead in many aspects even on their 14nm process vs AMD's 7nm process.
 
It would be interesting to see Intel 7nm vs AMD 7nm considering Intel are still ahead in many aspects even on their 14nm process vs AMD's 7nm process.

Yep. Intel's 14nm is better than pretty much everybody else's 10nm and near on par with 7nm. Just goes to show how insanely far Intel was at one point. People blame them for lack of improving but honestly they were so far ahead what was the point? They could have made higher core counts sure but if there was no need then why invest billions to do so?

My only gripe is they weren't prepared which shows arrogance.

Once Intel comes out with 10nm AMD are gonna be behind yet again
 
What Intel now call 10nm is no where near as ambitious as the 10nm they originally planned for launch 4 years ago, Intel 10nm should be roughly on par with EUV-based 7nm solutions (Samsungs first 7nm node, or 7nm+ for TSMC/AMD), and should launch at around the same time. Basically, Intel are not explicitly behind, but not in any way ahead either anymore. Any downsides of TSMC 7nm vs Intel 14nm will also be downsides of Intel 10nm, neither of the new nodes from any company will be able to hit clock speeds as high as previous gen nodes for a while, because density of heat generating components is now the limiting factor(Hence why we won't see Intel 10nm in performance desktop parts till 10nm++). Intel will have to get EUV right straight off the bat when it eventually comes for them, while having less experience than the other companies, just to keep up with TSMC & Samsung now.

Essentially, they bet against EUV and miscalculated how quickly it would be useful and economical, tried to make an incredibly aggressive node shrink without it, and so ended up realising the technological wall of such an attempt before anyone else but had instead decided to use their advantage to invest in scaling the wall(Sticking with attempting to develop 10nm as an aggressive non-EUV node) while not giving enough priority to the tech that would side step it, and have kinda ended up floundering the lead as a result of EUV maturing quite quickly in its later stages of development.
 
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Yep. Intel's 14nm is better than pretty much everybody else's 10nm and near on par with 7nm. Just goes to show how insanely far Intel was at one point. People blame them for lack of improving but honestly they were so far ahead what was the point? They could have made higher core counts sure but if there was no need then why invest billions to do so?

My only gripe is they weren't prepared which shows arrogance.

Once Intel comes out with 10nm AMD are gonna be behind yet again


It's only that good because of the time and money they spent on it. I bet it's a fraction of what zen cost to shrink.
 
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