God knows when we will see a Ice Lake based W chip, that could slip into 2021.
Intel can't really afford to wait until 2021. The high end Ryzen and the upcoming Threadripper will eat them alive in the workstation market if they snore through all of 2020 ( barring AMD going back to shooting themselves in the foot. AMD has a 'tick' (mostly shrink) lined up for 2020. By 2021 AMD will be on their next 'tock' . )
What we probably won't see is a core count increase. May even drop 4-6 cores for Ice Lake W (e.g., max 14 core count) . ( if uptick 18% per core then 10 cores is a 180% uptick .. almost two. ) . Couple that with some less arrogant pricing and they'll "survive' 2020 to get to 2021 with something that is "good enough".
Intel's immediate customers aren't happy with Intel's lack of execution. Punting products into the future each year as a excuse is suppose to be what Intel is turning around.
Even with all of the 10nm FUBAR they still managed to get updates out the door with the "W class" die. In 2018 it was just tweaked i9 caches and clock ( and only a hint at the 3647 switch ), but they did something. It was no Rip Van Winkle act.
Even if 10nm++ means have to drop core count they'll just roll with that because it shows progress. And that they can better protect the 8-14 core + high end bandwidth workstation space in the interim.
And that would probably be OK for the iMac Pro on Apple's scorecard.
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