Intel Jasper Lake, spotted the new Pentium and Celeron CPUs
The FanlessTech portal has published the specifications of Intel's Jasper Lake processors, which have remained secret until now. Obviously, pending official confirmation from the Santa Clara company, this information should be taken as mere rumors.
According to the article, Jasper Lake chips should be made on the 10nm production node and equipped with the Tremont microarchitecture, which should offer a substantial improvement in IPC (instructions per cycle) over the previous generation. Intel has already implemented Tremont in a couple of products, such as its Lakefield hybrid processors and Atom P series (codenamed Snow Ridge) and it won't be long before Tremont finally invades the low-end market with Jasper Lake. br>
Currently, the Gemini Lake Refresh CPU family is the one that is mostly found on devices on the market. The range is divided into J series for desktop and N series for mobile devices complying with thermal limits of 10W and 6W respectively. The processors come in a dual-core or quad-core configuration and lack support for Hyper-Threading technology. Assuming FanlessTech's information is accurate, Jasper Lake will apparently remain true to the design of its predecessors.
According to the article, Jasper Lake chips should be made on the 10nm production node and equipped with the Tremont microarchitecture, which should offer a substantial improvement in IPC (instructions per cycle) over the previous generation. Intel has already implemented Tremont in a couple of products, such as its Lakefield hybrid processors and Atom P series (codenamed Snow Ridge) and it won't be long before Tremont finally invades the low-end market with Jasper Lake. br>
Currently, the Gemini Lake Refresh CPU family is the one that is mostly found on devices on the market. The range is divided into J series for desktop and N series for mobile devices complying with thermal limits of 10W and 6W respectively. The processors come in a dual-core or quad-core configuration and lack support for Hyper-Threading technology. Assuming FanlessTech's information is accurate, Jasper Lake will apparently remain true to the design of its predecessors.