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5th April 2020, 08:35 | #1 |
[M] Reviewer Join Date: May 2010 Location: Romania
Posts: 153,541
| Intel launches 5.3GHz 10th Gen Intel Core H 100+ design wins with 30+ slimmer than 20mm It is not surprising that just two days after AMD had its moment and launched its Renoir high-end notebook processors, Intel has launched six new Core H series where the top contender goes all the way to 5.3 GHz. The product generation was developed under Comet Lake H, and the generation offers a mix of 45W TDP Core i5, Core i7, and Core i9 processors. The Core i5 10300H is a 2.5GHz CPU that tops at 4.5GHz and has four cores and eight threads, 8MB cache and 45W TDP. The second in line is Core i5 10400H is 2.6GHz CPU that tops at 4.6GHz and has four cores and eight threads, 8MB cache and 45W TDP. There is a choice of three Core i7 processors for the OEMs. The Core i7 10750H is the slowest of three, and it starts at 2.6GHz CPU base clock that tops at 5GHz. The Core i7 10750H has six cores and twelve threads, 12MB cache and 45W TDP. It also supports Intel thermal velocity boost. The second in line is the Core i7 10850H, and it starts at 2.7GHz CPU base clock that tops at 5.1 GHz. The Core i7 10850H has six cores and twelve threads, 12MB cache and 45W TDP. It also supports Intel thermal velocity boost, and intel calls it partially unlocked. The technology limits the overclocking to 400MHz maximum single-core overlock, and Intel had this with previous generations too. The fastest Core i7 10875H is eight-core and sixteen treads, has a base core clock at 2.3GHz, but it turbo clocks to 5.1GHz. It comes with 16MB cache and still has 45W TDP and supports thermal velocity boost The star of the launch is the Core i9 10980H, a 2.4GHz best base clock, and turbo clock all the way to unseen 5.3GHz. This eight-thread and sixteen core processor will power some of the fastest notebooks ever designed, and it comes with thermal velocity boost, 16MB cache, same 45W TDP, and it comes fully unlocked. AMD might have 7nm but can't get the clocks up higher than 4.4Ghz, while Intel has clearly passed 5GHz by 300 MHz. These are apples and oranges but just wanted to the point that it looks like you cannot have it all. https://fudzilla.com/news/mobile/505...n-intel-core-h |
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