Intel Meteor Lake, its first 7nm construction will come in 2022

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Intel Meteor Lake, its first 7nm construction will come in 2022

7nm, construction, Intel, Lake, Meteor


So far no details of this new build are known except that it will be a success on the current Alder Lake, made with a 10nm ++ node, Intel's attempt to replicate the ARM architecture's size.LITTLE is using its x86 build.

Alder Lake It combines high-capacity cores with low power, low power for the purpose of providing a robust system that provides low power consumption when the equipment is at rest, but high power when necessary. Intel "Lakefield" will be the first complex processor from Intel, and production will begin this year.

Intel Meteor Lake, what's known so far? +

As we said, right now the only thing that has leaked its name, is from driver files and company technical documents. Previous reports and leaks thought that Meteor Lake (then known by name only) could hit the market right where Intel will start making its "Gold Cove" money.

It is possible that, like Alder Lake, it could be a heterogenible chip targeting multiple market segments at the same time: desktops, laptops, and mobile devices, especially high performance tablets. The company can take advantage of its 7nm process, named after its 5nm TSMC competitors depending on the size of the transistor, increase the number of cores about Alder Lake.

Intel process Roadmap

That would mean that what Meteor Lake would have helped would not have been a huge success, however it will maintain use but provide better performance based on brute strength, or in other words, a large number of AMD-style and cord-based processes in the Bulldozer era (but without increasing usage). This is just a guess but it is not unreasonable to think that Intel has decided to take this position as things stand on the market now.

Will there be a new build for the GPU?

Speaking of speculation, a lot has been said about the development of Intel, which aims to 2022 by 7nm already, say GPU Gen. 13..

Yes, there are still no details on this, but common sense told us that when considering lithography, the relocation of ancient buildings and new graphics provided by Intel Xe It could also mean a change around integrated graphics, something that remains a weak point for Intel's systems.

That this makes sense to users doesn't mean, of course, that it is for Intel. We let "dream" of what might come in months or years to come, but then we have to see if it happens or not, and no one but Intel knows how its processors are made and how limited they are.

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