Intel has been trying to transition to the 10nm node since the past four years now, and although the first few (hundred) attempts might have failed, the chipmaker is finally back on track.
The mobile Ice Lake parts featuring the 10nm node have already started shipping and should hit retail soon enough, while the desktop and server offerings are expected to launch next year. We’ve already seen the Geekbench for the top-end Core i7-1065G7 and it is promising to say the least. Now, our Twitter chip-detectives have spotted the mid-range i5 and a Comet Lake (14nm) part in the SiSoft Database.
First, let’s have a look at the Ice Lake chip. This is a mid-range part, namely the Core i5-1035G4 coupled with an Iris Plus like the i7-1065G7, with 56CUs clocked at 1GHz (the G7 has 64 EUs clocked at 1.1GHz). The CPU appears to be a dual-core offering clocked at 1.10GHz, with a TDP of 61W. This is a desktop part, so the core-count is probably off. We haven’t seen a dual-core i5 in quite a while and given that AMD’s Ryzen 5 chips come with six, it’ll be safe to assume that the ICL desktop i5s will also be hex-core parts.
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