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Intel Unveils 5th Gen Core Series Broadwell-U CPUs and Cherry Trail Atom

MojoKid writes Intel has officially taken the wraps off its 5th generation Core Series notebook processor, code named Broadwell-U. This new SoC is a "tick" in Intel's tick-tock plan, which means it's mostly a die shrink of the existing Haswell architecture, at least on the CPU side. On the GPU side, there's a bevy of improvements and advances, and the video decoder block has been beefed up with dual bit stream decoders in its high-end (GT3) hardware. Other feature improvements and capabilities are expected, though Intel has been quiet on exactly what they have tweaked and changed to date. Intel is claiming that the architecture will boost battery life by 1.5 hours, speed video conversions, and offer a whopping 22% improvement to 3D performance — a gain on par with what we saw when moving from Ivy Bridge to Haswell. Intel also took the wraps off their next gen Atom CPU, code named Cherry Trail. This is essentially a 14nm Bay Trail die shrink that's been on the roadmap for a while. As with Haswell-Broadwell, the Bay Trail-Cherry Trail shift is aimed at improving CPU power consumption and overall SoC power characteristics, though again, we'll see an updated GPU baked in as well.

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  1. Re:am disappoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I own one of those old Core 2 Quads. It also was akin to a volcano. A big gigantic Zalman heatsink / fan (9700) could barely keep it cool. Nowadays, I have a 1.4Ghz dual core i5 that encodes / renders stuff faster, and uses minimal power...

  2. Re:am disappoint by EmagGeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    More speed has not been what the market has wanted in a great number of years. Lowering power consumption has taken a front seat to CPUs being faster.

    That having been said, CPUs ARE getting faster, if you want to pay for it. Outside of that, a core 2 quad from SEVEN YEARS AGO is still about EIGHT TIMES AS MUCH computer power as the average Internet user needs.