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Getting to the Core of Intel’s i# Lineup – What do They Have in Store?  

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Posted by FiXT— June 18th, 2009, 11:56 AM


intel logo2 Getting to the Core of Intels i# Lineup   What do They Have in Store?

A blog post by Intel’s Bill Calder sums it up perfectly,

“Over the last year or so, Intel has been quietly working behind the scenes taking a hard look at our brand structure and exploring ways to make it more rational and easier to understand. The fact of the matter is, we have a complex structure with too many platform brands, product names, and product brands, and we’ve made things confusing for consumers and IT buyers in the process.”


Since the introduction of Intel’s Core architecture and consequently their “Core 2″ naming scheming, making sense of the nearly four dozen different desktop Core 2 processors alone is a chore. In addition to that we have the Pentium Dual-Core, a basketful of mobile CPU’s, and the numerous technology brands they like to slap on every description possible. Arguably it would be easier learn the countries of the globe before memorizing Intel’s current lineup of products.


In the blog tidbit however, Calder not only promises that Intel’s new Core i# series will be more consumer friendly, but gives us some hints as to where Intel wants to take the lineup.


The Core lineup will expand with the much anticipated Core i5 as a mainstream offering, as well, the market will receive the Core i3 as a budget/ regular consumer level body of processors, which may include the current Core 2 Duos & Quads.

“Over time those [Core™2 Duo and Core 2 Quad, etc] will go away and in its place will be a simplified family of Core processors spanning multiple levels: Intel® Core™ i3 processor, Intel® Core™ i5 processor, and Intel® Core™ i7 processors. Core i3 and Core i5 are new modifiers and join the previously announced Intel Core i7 to round out the family structure”


These “modifiers” are not going to be new brand’s of processors, but identifying markers to help separate and assist the targeted consumers. The current range of Core 2 Duo’s for instance are only marked by “E####”  spanning from the lowest end E4### series, up to the E8###, same with the Quad population, and the Pentium Dual-Core’s. There is no form of separation to easily differentiate to consumers which “family” would best suit their needs. It is based on a numerical system which typically defines what codename the particular CPUs are built on and there is no quick or easy reference guide to look at.


 

Core i3

Core i5

Core i7

Codename

Wolfdale

Yorkfield

Arrandale

Lynnfield

Clarkdale

Lynnfield

Bloomfield

Architecture

Core 2

Core 2

Nehalem

Nehalem

Westmere

Nehalem

Nehalem

Socket (LGA)

775

775

1156

1156

1156

1156

1366

Cores 

2 

4 

2

4 

2 

4 

4 

Hyper Threading

No

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Turbo

No

No

Unknown

Yes

Unknown

Yes

Yes

L3 cache

No

No

Unknown 

8MB

4MB

8MB

8MB












*depiction of possible lineup – May not be accurate


The blog goes further to address the various technologies that Intel currently produces,

“We are changing and transitioning some of the platform brands. Intel vPro technology continues to stand for best in class security and manageability and will henceforth be paired with Intel Core in either Core i5 or Core i7 iterations. Again this wont happen overnight, but beginning next year Intel business client systems will carry either the Intel Core i7 vPro processor or the Intel Core i5 vPro processor name. With this focus on Intel Core, the Centrino processor technology brand will be retired for PCs beginning next year. However, Centrino has tremendous equity as a wireless technology, so we will transition the name to our Wi-Fi and WiMAX products beginning in 2010.”


So there we have it, a look at some treats for consumers in the near future, and hopefully a more common sense division in the product lineups.


Tags: core i7, intel, processor

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Comments (5)

  1. H-F says:
    June 20, 2009 at 2:29 am

    With all these different sockets, this line of CPUs is not upgrade friendly anymore.

  2. k4ZE says:
    June 22, 2009 at 12:38 pm

    775 and 1366 already exist so there is no probelm with upgradeability.

  3. Intel Looking to Go 32nm By the End of the Year! | Hardware Canucks says:
    June 29, 2009 at 10:49 am

    [...] speculations were made about the future of Intel’s lineup when Intel announced their “re-branding” Core scheme, to help consumers separate the benefits of their confusing lineups. According to sources from [...]

  4. Intel Six-Core Processors Named and Priced | Hardware Canucks says:
    December 16, 2009 at 11:36 am

    [...] is instead lumped in with its current offerings under the moniker of Core i7. You will remember Intel boasted how their new branding would clarify and distinguish its processors for the general consumers; unfortunately as we have [...]

  5. Upcoming Intel Core Series CPU’s Leaked | Hardware Canucks says:
    February 2, 2010 at 11:23 am

    [...] their head a shake (and fire their marketting team) when it comes to the naming schemes which they promised to be much clearer for consumers. With the current Core i7 975 edition being a 4 core Bloomfield based chip, setting an entirely new [...]


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