Gaming

Intel Lunar Lake will not have a successor architecture for the next generation


Intel Lunar Lake will not have a successor architecture for the next generation



Intel has presented its new Lunar Lake processors at the beginning of last September. A series of processors differentalthough within the fifteenth generation of Intel processors. According to tells us Golde Ping Upgrade on the Chinese social network Weibo, this processor will not have a direct successor to its architectureas is usually the case with many other Intel series.

Geeknetic Intel Lunar Lake will not have a successor architecture for the next generation 1

The next generation of processors is said to that will happen these Lunar Lake are the next Panther Lake. The Intel Panther Lake will succeed these Lunar Lake in terms of generations, but not as a succession of this peculiar and different low consumption architecture from Intel. The main difference is that the Panther Lake They will not have integrated RAM memory in the package itself as if these Intel Core Ultra 200V do. It also does not seem that they will have high efficiency cores, replacing them with high-efficiency, low-power cores that will provide efficiency equivalent to these Lunar Lake.

Geeknetic Intel Lunar Lake will not have a successor architecture for the next generation 2

Also in the same post The existence of a Lunar Lake processor with more cores is deniedrumors spoke about one of these processors with 6+8 cores, even 8+8 cores, something that Golden Pig denies. In any case, this is not expected new Intel Panther Lake architecture until 2025there are still many months in which we can discover more features of this next generation.

End of Article. Tell us something in the Comments!

Article Editor: Juan Antonio Soto

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I broke down my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and 210MB of hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles I write for Geeknetic. I dedicate most of my free time to video games, contemporary and retro, on the more than 20 consoles I have, in addition to the PC.

Source link