According to the images published in this processor, the only data we don't know for sure is the following:
- It has the letter labeled «SRFBT», and the first «S» indicates that it is a production chip, not a qualification. This means it's a processor company, so it's strange that it doesn't have a name beyond that CC150 Not a trade name product.
- The batch code is L909E392, which tells us that this particular processor was manufactured in the Fab of Malaysia in the ninth week of 2019 (ending February last year). This makes us great when it fits, because it means that the processor is already one year old
Features of Intel CC150
As we mentioned before, You have no business names in your IHS that shows its range, but the item doesn't have the speed of Turbo can prove to be a low-end Celeron or Pentium processor, something that can be included in this because the CPU-Z is hosting, the processor 8 cores and 16 cables running at 3.5 GHz with a 95 watt TDPThat is certainly not a low end processor.
CPU-Z also tells us that it is an eighth-generation processor (Cofi Lake) made at 14 nm, that it has 16 MB of L3 cache and does not have the graphics type integrated. This puts it off at the same height as Intel Core i9 processors.
The biggest clue we can understand about this processor in its design. Similar to current generation Intel Coffee Lake processors, including contacts and capacitors found inside the pin point of the processor is the same, and is expected to be compatible with any Intel LGA1151 motherboard.
As far as performance is concerned, they have pulled out the integrated line on the CPU-Z to see it, comparing it to the Core i7-8700K and the Core i9-9900KF with the following effect:
The Intel CC150 is 15% faster than the Core i7-8700K on multi-core, yet 8700K is 4% higher on mono-core. With respect to the Core i9-9900KF, the CC150 is 22% lower in the multi core and 2% lower in the single core. Of course, with or without Turbo frequency this processor is of the highest quality.
So what is this Intel CC150?
Some suggest that the processor may have been created for a new one GeForce Now platform that NVIDIA has introduced games to the cloud, and at this point can make a lot of sense and explain why the processor was designed for a year and which we haven't heard about until now.
In any case, given its nomenclature it is not a sales process, that is, we will not find it in stores, which gives much of the above understanding.