Following leaks is often a game of cat and mouse – what is actually legitimate and what might not be. Traditionally AnandTech shies away from leaks for that very reason, and we prefer to have multiple sources that are saying the same thing, rather than addressing every potential rumor on the blogosphere. Nonetheless, hints towards a new product from Intel, Alder Lake, have been cropping up over the past few months, including getting a small mention in Intel’s Q2 2020 earnings. The leaks have suggested that it would offer a mixed Hybrid x86 environment similar to Intel’s current Lakefield product that uses high-performance cores paired with high-efficiency cores. As part of Intel’s Architecture Day 2020, the company officially announced Alder Lake as a hybrid x86 product on its roadmaps.

In the roadmap and as part of the discussions, Intel’s Raja Koduri confirms that Alder Lake will be a combination of the Golden Cove high performance computing core and the Gracemont high efficiency core, and the goal of this chip is to offer a ‘Performance Hybrid’ option into the portfolio. Raja explained to the audience that the company has learned a lot due to building Lakefield, its current hybrid x86 chip for thin and light notebooks, and while Lakefield was focused on battery life, Alder Lake will focus instead on performance.

Alder Lake will involve Intel’s next generation hardware scheduler, which we are told will be able to leverage all cores for performance and make it seamless to any software package. Intel claims that Alder Lake will be Intel’s best (ever? 2021?) performance-per-watt processor.

If leaks are to be believed, then Alder Lake looks set to offer an 8+8 design, although that has not been confirmed. Intel did not go into detail if Alder Lake will involve any next generation packaging, such as Foveros (which Lakefield does) – but in the Q2 2020 financial disclosures, it was said to be positioned for mobile and desktops. We expect Intel to discuss Golden Cove and Gracemont at some point next year, and then Alder Lake as an extension to those – we have already seen Intel documents regarding new instructions for each of these cores. My prediction is to come back this time next year, where we should have more to talk about.

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  • Alistair - Friday, August 14, 2020 - link

    I don't even have that big of a problem with Intel chips. But they aren't even available, it is all empty marketing.

    Give me a 4 core Tiger Lake chip, unlocked, with Xe graphics, on my desktop. Thanks. Not for sale? Then it is meaningless.
  • Flunk - Friday, August 14, 2020 - link

    Good luck, they're still planning get ANOTHER Sky Lake refresh for desktop (Rocket Lake).
  • eddman - Friday, August 14, 2020 - link

    All the rumors are claiming it's based on a Willow Cove derived arch but at 14nm, Cypress Cove.
  • SarahKerrigan - Friday, August 14, 2020 - link

    Rocket isn't a Skylake refresh.
  • yeeeeman - Saturday, August 15, 2020 - link

    Rocket Lake is a backport of a 10nm CPU to 14nm. It has a new core (willow cove) and it will bring some IPC improvements.
  • Santoval - Saturday, August 15, 2020 - link

    Rocket Lake is not a Skylake refresh, it is a 14nm node "refresh".
  • FXi - Sunday, August 16, 2020 - link

    Rocket isn't even here yet. And how many times has some future roadmap changed? Yeah...
  • Meteor2 - Monday, August 17, 2020 - link

    RL is still nothing but rumour. Using the word "will" in the same sentence as RL is ridiculous. Try "might", "maybe".
  • yeeeeman - Saturday, August 15, 2020 - link

    Tigerlake is launching in September for notebooks.
    They can afford to make desktop parts that will compete with cheap AMD parts and sell for peanuts on their new 10nm process since it is not as high yielding as needed and the capacity from what I understand is not sufficient. So they focus on laptops and servers with 10nm and 14nm will have to make do for desktops this year.
  • Santoval - Saturday, August 15, 2020 - link

    "They can afford.."
    You rather meant "they *cannot* afford", right?

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