Intel Cannonlake with 8 core will Released In 2018?. -It seems pretty clear that to make computers faster by increasing the clock speed will reach the upper limit of practicality. The most recent possible solution is to add cores (cores) of the process, namely parallelism in which there is a series of identical resources that work together. This raises many problems and opportunities, but rumors suggest that Intel plans to develop 8 core CPUs in Cannonlake aimed at the desktop and home market, the market slot currently filled by 4 core processors, and the latest 6 cores.
Previously Intel has reportedly will launch a processor with the latest generation of Canon Lake at the end of this year, but this plan is likely to fail. The first processor in production with this 10 nm fabrication process is likely to be released in 2018.
Canon Lake is targeted for laptops that require low-power processor and 2-in-1 notebook. Intel needs time for the development of this Canon Lake chip to be available to PC makers. Mass production for Canon Lake processors will begin in the first half of 2018, but to begin production Intel will run in the second half of this year.
Will Cannonlake 8 Core Be a Mainstream Product or a High-End Desktop / Server Product?
There are some reports that Cannonlake can be a high-end server / workstation / desktop rather than a mainstream Intel CPU. The first is the idea of high speed products and coherent products, a product that will be clearly important in controlling the performance of servers and supercomputers.
The second is the number of cores, Intel has introduced mainstream processors with up to 4 core CPU cores and larger graphics engines over the last four years, starting with Sandy Bridge in 2011. And since then, Intel has been working hard to achieve that chip Smaller, more advanced process nodes to make the graphics engine larger and more integrated. This effort has made Intel successfully compete with low-end GPUs from nVidia and AMD and AMD's APU solutions, where AMD is well known for its integrated graphics engine.
For those of you who are waiting for a laptop with a Canon Lake processor this is likely to have to wait much longer, and maybe you can get an 8th generation processor from Intel with 14-nm fabrication process.
Laptops with 8th generation core processors from intel may be more interesting but Canon Lake with 10-nm will be a slower chip than the 14th-generation 14-nm core chip. In theory the chip with 10-nm is faster than the 14-nm chip, but low-power on Canon Lake has fewer transistors and is not comparable to 14-nm chips with more transistors.
Canon lake is expected to work better than Intel Kaby Lake cores that have fewer transistors. Canon Lake replaces the low-power of the M / Y Kaby Lake core targeted for lightweight laptops like the 2-in-1.
Perhaps Canon Lake will compete with AMD Ryzen and Qualcomm-based ARM Snapdragon 835 processors that will be introduced with low-power on Windows 10 and hybrid laptops later this year.
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