Intel has promised its 10-generation laptops for laptops up to 8 physical cores and 16 threads process, at the speed of up to 5 GHz or higher (although we won't see that speed in 8-core processors).
That will be in the top spot, but in the meantime we have to get the functionality of Intel Core i7-10750H 6-core, 12-wire who works at Base speed of 2.6 GHz, the turbo speed is still unknown.
Core Performance i7-10750H
As can be seen from the data collected from the bench, the processor scored an average of 16137 points for Passmark, indicating an increase of 30.2% in relation to the score obtained in the same test by Core i7-8750H, or a An 84.2% increase compared to the Core i7-7700HQ
If we want to compare it with AMD, unfortunately we can't do it with the next Ryzen 4000, but with Ryzen 5 2500U who gets 7334 points in the test, less than half, so this Core i7-10750H has 220% higher performance, all of this in a Passmark CPU test that makes sense using the 12 threads of this laptop processor.
Intel Core i7-10750H vs Core i7-9750H
There is also performance data in Geekbench that will allow us to compare the following processor, which is launched in anticipation of the first quarter of the year, Core i7-9750H in the current generation, a 6-bit processor and 12 processors are 2.6 GHz. We liken it to this processor because it's the equivalent of the current generation, and actually corks and the same threads with the same speed (something to think about.
Here we can see that at single-core points, the Core i7-10750H gets 1258 points compared to 1159 for the ninth-generation processor, which shows a yield improvement of 8.54%. When going for multi-factor, its 6065 points compared to the previous 4416 points represent a 37.34% improvement
The battle for the throne in the laptop market
The fact that Intel has seen the wolf's ears is a fact. Since AMD introduced its Ryzen 4000 processors, there has been much clarification about the future of the writing market. For this reason, Intel seems to be trying to place batteries, and although this tenth generation of processors will still be based on current lithography at 14 nm (compared to 7 nm AMD), they will obviously sell their skin less in terms of performance (we'll see more efficiently) .
The battle is taking place, and it will be very interesting to see some results once the manufacturers have their choice in the laptop market.