Can you define redesign then?
I believe ice lake is Intel's 10nm chipI tried to looked over the Intel roadmap but instead I got more confused... So we are expecting a 10nm integration for MBP 13'' next year right?
I believe ice lake is Intel's 10nm chip
https://www.techradar.com/news/intel-ice-lake
Some 10mn chips appear to be already out, though the ones that apple uses (45w for instance) are not and I'm not sure when they'll hit the market - maybe 2020?
I believe ice lake is Intel's 10nm chip
https://www.techradar.com/news/intel-ice-lake
Some 10mn chips appear to be already out, though the ones that apple uses (45w for instance) are not and I'm not sure when they'll hit the market - maybe 2020?
don’t believe Ice Lake H 10nm/45W is even on the roadmap
I've not really followed the move to 10mn, so I'll not be surprised over the delay, I guess I assumed that with the rollout of ice lake in some form we'd see the 45w variant, but I guess not ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Everything points to 2021/22 before we see 10nm @ 45W for now.
AMD seem to punch below their weight for mobile chipsets though. Their chip in the Surface Laptop 3 seems to struggle with energy efficiency and compatibility/optimisation if not raw performance. The Intel versions seem to be the ones people are after, which is pretty surprising given 'Ice Lake' is basically Kaby Lake refresh built on a ~10nm process with a few of the usual generational tweaks and optimisations (i.e. it's barely more than yet-another-14nm-lake). Though they aren't quite there this generation, it also seems Intel is now making strides with the iGPUs which will hurt AMD and the low end dGPU market.Only hope for better CPUs on MBP is that AMD makes them. But AMD is slow to move to the mobile market.
That would be the final blow to Intel. I really hope that AMD has some plans for laptops as well.
AMD seem to punch below their weight for mobile chipsets though. Their chip in the Surface Laptop 3 seems to struggle with energy efficiency and compatibility/optimisation if not raw performance. The Intel versions seem to be the ones people are after, which is pretty surprising given 'Ice Lake' is basically Kaby Lake refresh built on a ~10nm process with a few of the usual generational tweaks and optimisations (i.e. it's barely more than yet-another-14nm-lake). Though they aren't quite there this generation, it also seems Intel is now making strides with the iGPUs which will hurt AMD and the low end dGPU market.
I've not really followed the move to 10mn, so I'll not be surprised over the delay, I guess I assumed that with the rollout of ice lake in some form we'd see the 45w variant, but I guess not ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Yes, we'll see if the second generation at 10nm allows them to crank the GHz back up. The IPC is good, its just they can't get the clock rate up.
Yeah the big issue with 10nm is yields, and it seems that current yields can't justify 45W H series for now.
Are the low frequency connected to the yield or is it a consequence of some weakness in the 10 nm design / process that will not improve even if yield improves?
Only hope for better CPUs on MBP is that AMD makes them. But AMD is slow to move to the mobile market.
That would be the final blow to Intel. I really hope that AMD has some plans for laptops as well.
AMD seem to punch below their weight for mobile chipsets though. Their chip in the Surface Laptop 3 seems to struggle with energy efficiency and compatibility/optimisation if not raw performance. The Intel versions seem to be the ones people are after, which is pretty surprising given 'Ice Lake' is basically Kaby Lake refresh built on a ~10nm process with a few of the usual generational tweaks and optimisations (i.e. it's barely more than yet-another-14nm-lake). Though they aren't quite there this generation, it also seems Intel is now making strides with the iGPUs which will hurt AMD and the low end dGPU market.
Would Apple be able to use Thunderbolt 3 with an AMD CPU? My understanding is that Intel owns that and would need to license it out.Only hope for better CPUs on MBP is that AMD makes them. But AMD is slow to move to the mobile market.
That would be the final blow to Intel. I really hope that AMD has some plans for laptops as well.
Would Apple be able to use Thunderbolt 3 with an AMD CPU? My understanding is that Intel owns that and would need to license it out.
Before March 2019 there were no AMD chipsets or computers with Thunderbolt support released or announced due to the certification requirements (Intel did not certify non-Intel platforms). However, the YouTuber Wendell Wilson from Level1 Techs was able to get Thunderbolt 3 support on an AMD computer with a Threadripper CPU and Titan Ridge add-in card working by modifying the firmware, indicating that the lack of Thunderbolt support on non-Intel systems is not due to any hardware limitations.[74][75] As of May 2019, it is possible to have Thunderbolt 3 support on AMD using add-in card without any problems.[76] And motherboards like ASRock X570Creator already have integrated Thunderbolt 3 support.[77]
Additionally soon-burgeoning USB 4 effectively eliminates the need for TB 3 as a dedicated thing, it's basically baked in.It's available to anyone royalty free.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunderbolt_(interface)#Royalty_situation
Additionally soon-burgeoning USB 4 effectively eliminates the need for TB 3 as a dedicated thing, it's basically baked in.
Maybe, there are appropriate 6 core U series chips but they only come with UHD graphics so either a 6 core model would have better CPU but lesser GPU performance, or an additional discrete GPU would be needed. I think it would make sense to redesign the high end 13" model into a bigger and more powerful 14" with dedicated graphics, as many 13" class Windows machines offer dedicated graphics now, but we will see.Is there a chance that we will see 6-core in the 13/14” model?
Maybe, there are appropriate 6 core U series chips but they only come with UHD graphics so either a 6 core model would have better CPU but lesser GPU performance, or an additional discrete GPU would be needed. I think it would make sense to redesign the high end 13" model into a bigger and more powerful 14" with dedicated graphics, as many 13" class Windows machines offer dedicated graphics now, but we will see.
So, when are we thinking the next incremental update will be? May of 2020?