Intel Discloses Detailed Skylake Architecture Enhancements
MojoKid writes: Intel is still keeping a number of details regarding its complete Skylake microarchitecture and product line-up under wraps for a few more weeks, but at a public session at IDF, some of the design updates introduced with Skylake were detailed. Virtually every aspect of Skylake has been improved versus the previous-gen Haswell microarchitecture. I/O, Ring Bus, and LLC throughput has been increased, the graphics architecture has been updated to support DX12 and new eDRAM configurations, it has an integrated camera ISP, support for faster DDR4 memory, and more flexible overclocking features. All of these things culminate in a processor that offers higher IPC performance and improved power efficiency. There are also new security technologies dubbed Intel Software Guard Extensions (Intel SGX) onboard Skylake, which support new instructions to create and isolate enclaves from malware and privileged software attack, along with Memory Protection Extensions (Intel MPX) to help protect stack and heap buffer boundaries as well. A new technology, dubbed Intel Speed Shift, also allows Skylake to switch power states faster than previous-gen products, controlling P states fully in hardware, whereas previous-gen products required OS control. The end result is that Skylake can switch P states in 1ms, whereas it takes roughly 30ms with older processors.
I wonder if this Skylake can be considered an upgrade path..
That would violate Intels strategy, which is never allow a realistic upgrade path.
"His name was James Damore."
Sounds like the last few generations - lots of incremental improvements and excellent technology but wont amount to much of a difference in general performance.
Intel's pricing (and refusal to offer 6-core mainstream parts) is a consequence of Intel's effective MONOPOLY in the x86 space. AMD's current CPU offerings are a BAD JOKE, offering around 50% per core of Intel's core performance. No serious PC gamer would opt for anything less than a true 4-core i5. AMD isn't even in the picture.
So why did I pay less for my i7 a couple of years ago than I did when I bought my Pentium-4 back in the days when AMD was actually competitive?
Intel's current competition is ARM, not AMD.