Intel's new flagship Personnel i9-11900K processor will colonize in the first quartern of 2021. The chipmaker has provided the latest viewing for its first 11th Gen (Rocket Lake-S) desktop fries at CES today. Highlighted by the flagship Personnel i9-11900K, the new fries are said to bring up to 19 percent college IPC (instructions per cycle), up to 50 percent finer microelectronics graphics, as able-bodied as finer AI performance.
And while Intel isn't really realizable to take the lid off the full 11th Gen Rocket Lake-S lineup neutral yet, it did viewing the flagship Personnel i9 model: an eight-core, 16-thread chipset with runnerup consternation speeds up to a whopping 5.3GHz. The processor also includes support for DDR4 RAM at 3,200MHz, a totalitarian of 20 PCIe 4.0 lanes, as able-bodied as plane backwards congeniality with Intel's 400 Train chipsets. Unfortunately, there's no yack on pricing or a release stage for the new typic neutral yet.
.. .Despite the 11th Gen moniker, though, the new Rocket Lake-S fries are still technically 14nm fries -- they don't use the 10nm process. However, they do feature Intel's Cypress Fiord cores, which bring improvements from the 10nm personnel designs inadvertently to the 14nm roundup process, assuasive for faster speeds recurring with Intel's faster Xe microelectronics graphics.
According to Intel, the neolith in personnel count compared to aftermost year's Personnel i9-10900K (which had 10 cores as able-bodied as 20 threads) is due to that move (the 10nm fries are currently personalized designed for up to eight cores seasonable now), although it promises that the scopious personation on the new 11th Gen typic will still be better.
There's no official release stage yet for the usable Rocket Lake-S chips, loosely Intel promises that they'll be released in the first quartern of 2021.
Update January 11th, 4:47pm ET: Added runnerup divisions for Intel's Cypress Fiord cores.
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