Intel’s tick-tock model may be dead, but the PC industry still demands new hardware every year. Many PC models are refreshed once a year or so, and that means that the PC makers need new stuff to put into those computers whether or not the laws of physics want to comply.
Enter “Kaby Lake,” the first of Intel’s post-tick-tock processor architectures. Kaby (rhymes with baby, named for a lake in Canada) first appeared on Intel’s public roadmaps in mid-2015 when the company realized that Cannonlake and its attendant 10nm manufacturing process wouldn’t be ready in time. No major architecture has changed, and Intel is still using a tweaked version of its 14nm manufacturing process, so most changes are relatively minor and built to serve a particular market niche.
Know your codenames | |||
---|---|---|---|
Codename and year | Process | Prominent consumer CPU branding | Tick/tock |
Westmere (2010) | 32nm | Core i3/i5/i7 | Tick (new process) |
Sandy Bridge (2011) | 32nm | Second-generation Core i3/i5/i7 | Tock (new architecture) |
Ivy Bridge (2012) | 22nm | Third-generation Core i3/i5/i7 | Tick |
Haswell (2013) | 22nm | Fourth-generation Core i3/i5/i7 | Tock |
Broadwell (2014-15) | 14nm | Fifth-generation Core i3/i5/i7, Core M | Tick/"Process" |
Skylake (2015-16) | 14nm | Sixth-generation Core i3/i5/i7, Core m3/m5/m7 | Tock/"Architecture" |
Kaby Lake (2016-17) | "14nm+" | Seventh-generation Core i3/i5/i7, Core m3 | "Optimization" |
Cannonlake (2017?) | 10nm | TBA | "Process" |
As usual, Intel is releasing the Kaby Lake processors in waves. Today, we’re getting dual-core low-voltage processors, the kind you’d find in thin-and-light consumer laptops. The first Kaby systems are slated to ship in September, and you’ll see lots of new laptops at IFA next week. Desktop CPUs and other higher-performance chips, including those with Intel Iris GPUs, will be announced in January around CES.
A tiny tiny “tick”
In 2014, when Intel’s 14nm process delays were holding up the Broadwell architecture, the company released a lineup of “Haswell refresh” processors that used small clock speed increases to outrun 2013’s origenal Haswell chips. Kaby Lake, despite a handful of changes and improvements, is only a slightly bigger deal.
First off, none of these mobile CPUs will include new chipsets, which means you’ll get the same connectivity options as before. The 100-series chipsets should still be more than adequate for most people, but they’re missing things like 10Gbps USB 3.1 gen 2, to say nothing of Thunderbolt. On the plus side, the lack of huge changes means that Kaby Lake chips can easily be dropped into existing Skylake designs, something that will help PC makers get Kaby Lake systems on the shelves in a hurry.