Discussion Intel Meteor, Arrow, Lunar & Panther Lakes Discussion Threads

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Tigerick

Senior member
Apr 1, 2022
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As Hot Chips 34 starting this week, Intel will unveil technical information of upcoming Meteor Lake (MTL) and Arrow Lake (ARL), new generation platform after Raptor Lake. Both MTL and ARL represent new direction which Intel will move to multiple chiplets and combine as one SoC platform.

MTL also represents new compute tile that based on Intel 4 process which is based on EUV lithography, a first from Intel. Intel expects to ship MTL mobile SoC in 2023.

ARL will come after MTL so Intel should be shipping it in 2024, that is what Intel roadmap is telling us. ARL compute tile will be manufactured by Intel 20A process, a first from Intel to use GAA transistors called RibbonFET.



Comparison of upcoming Intel's U-series CPU: Core Ultra 100U, Lunar Lake and Panther Lake

ModelCode-NameDateTDPNodeTilesMain TileCPULP E-CoreLLCGPUXe-cores
Core Ultra 100UMeteor LakeQ4 202315 - 57 WIntel 4 + N5 + N64tCPU2P + 8E212 MBIntel Graphics4
?Lunar LakeQ4 202417 - 30 WN3B + N62CPU + GPU & IMC4P + 4E012 MBArc8
?Panther LakeQ1 2026 ??Intel 18A + N3E3CPU + MC4P + 8E4?Arc12



Comparison of die size of Each Tile of Meteor Lake, Arrow Lake, Lunar Lake and Panther Lake

Meteor LakeArrow Lake (N3B)Lunar LakePanther Lake
PlatformMobile H/U OnlyDesktop & Mobile H&HXMobile U OnlyMobile H
Process NodeIntel 4TSMC N3BTSMC N3BIntel 18A
DateQ4 2023Desktop-Q4-2024
H&HX-Q1-2025
Q4 2024Q1 2026 ?
Full Die6P + 8P8P + 16E4P + 4E4P + 8E
LLC24 MB36 MB ?12 MB?
tCPU66.48
tGPU44.45
SoC96.77
IOE44.45
Total252.15



Intel Core Ultra 100 - Meteor Lake



As mentioned by Tomshardware, TSMC will manufacture the I/O, SoC, and GPU tiles. That means Intel will manufacture only the CPU and Foveros tiles. (Notably, Intel calls the I/O tile an 'I/O Expander,' hence the IOE moniker.)



 

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yuri69

Senior member
Jul 16, 2013
554
997
136
It will be a brutal next to years
L in Server
L in Desktop
Game over in GPU
Foundry going nowhere
Okay in Laptop
* The best server product since Rome arrived
* Desktop is a super tiny niche and Intel's gains are comparable to Zen 5 - both are rather small
* GPU has been a standard "Koduri project" - think of AMD Vega
* Foundry remains to be seen
* Laptop is very good and actually is not a niche like desktop or discrete GPUs

Intel is fine
 

Hulk

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
4,611
2,645
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I have to think about this some more but I am not so sure the bulk of the efficiency gain is coming from the TMSC process. Architectural gains, especially Skymont 50+% IPC increase allows for relaxed clocks. As we all know backing down clocks even 10 or 15% can provide huge efficiency gains.

Ultimately, I think Intel may have gone TMSC more for transistor density (economics) rather than efficiency. Meaning ARL on Intel 7 would have been physically and economically huge.
 

poke01

Platinum Member
Mar 8, 2022
2,351
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The 285K uses more power than 9950X, interesting.
And the results are likewise close but opposite in Blender 4.1, Linux.
View attachment 110221
And as the scene becomes larger it seems 9950X pulls ahead
ahh, I give up. okay now I’m on the same boat as abwx, does Intel really optimise the hell out of Cinebench?

148 ST doesn’t really match in other ST benchmarks and MT is somewhat dubious. Is it scheduling issues, which doesn’t effect effect Cinebench2024? 🧐
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
11,591
4,408
136
NBC review, they have a lot of benches that are not used by other sites even if often
quite relevant.


The 285K uses more power than 9950X, interesting.

ahh, I give up. okay now I’m on the same boat as abwx, does Intel really optimise the hell out of Cinebench?

148 ST doesn’t really match in other ST benchmarks and MT is somewhat dubious. Is it scheduling issues, which doesn’t effect effect Cinebench2024? 🧐

Mainly in CB 2024, there s power and scores comparisons in the review above, for CB R15/20/23/2024.
 
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GTracing

Member
Aug 6, 2021
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I have to think about this some more but I am not so sure the bulk of the efficiency gain is coming from the TMSC process. Architectural gains, especially Skymont 50+% IPC increase allows for relaxed clocks. As we all know backing down clocks even 10 or 15% can provide huge efficiency gains.

Ultimately, I think Intel may have gone TMSC more for transistor density (economics) rather than efficiency. Meaning ARL on Intel 7 would have been physically and economically huge.
In regard to the choice of tiled architecture, I think part of the issue is that they've built out the manufacturing to do tiles, but they have no customers for it. If Intel doesn't make tiled CPUs, they still have the costs from the idle or shuttered production lines.
 

AcrosTinus

Member
Jun 23, 2024
149
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Doesn't look like it. It appears ARL launch is indeed a disaster. All the reviews so far are quite tragic.



Thats a bold claim considering all the negative reviews on X/Twitter. I hope you can back it up with some actual numbers.

And it appears it's lagging in MT too.
Read the Phoronix Linux bench, the chip is not bad. Windows and the power plans seem to be limiting performance for the sake of lower appearing power consumption.

This generation is for anyone on a 10900K and wants to stay on Intel. You will get better performance in any case, just not class leading performance.
 
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Hitman928

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2012
6,330
11,137
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* The best server product since Rome arrived
* Desktop is a super tiny niche and Intel's gains are comparable to Zen 5 - both are rather small
* GPU has been a standard "Koduri project" - think of AMD Vega
* Foundry remains to be seen
* Laptop is very good and actually is not a niche like desktop or discrete GPUs

Intel is fine

  • Intel had the lead in server for a couple of weeks until Turin launched. They're far closer now than before, but it's still going to be a tough task to stop AMD from advancing.
  • It's not super tiny niche, that's only super high end desktop systems.
    • Not sure if we're looking at the same charts, but Intel has regressed as much as it has gained in performance with ARL.
  • dGPU is on life support. Integrated is looking better but they need some actual volume design wins for that to matter (e.g., steam deck).
  • Agreed. Biggest thing is they need real customers which they hope to start to get in 2 years time. It's gonna be rough until then, maybe longer if they can't convince people on 14A.
  • They are doing pretty well on laptop, they just need to get back on their own nodes to help with margins.
 
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AcrosTinus

Member
Jun 23, 2024
149
140
76
* The best server product since Rome arrived
* Desktop is a super tiny niche and Intel's gains are comparable to Zen 5 - both are rather small
* GPU has been a standard "Koduri project" - think of AMD Vega
* Foundry remains to be seen
* Laptop is very good and actually is not a niche like desktop or discrete GPUs

Intel is fine
People forget that we are in a desktop gaming bubble. At work we have approved the new Notebooks for the team, AMD is nowhere to be seen. That is nearly 15K devices on Intel just from a small company under Microsoft. Imagine what other companies are doing....

Intel is fine but they cannot be fine forever
 

Saylick

Diamond Member
Sep 10, 2012
3,605
8,075
136
People forget that we are in a desktop gaming bubble. At work we have approved the new Notebooks for the team, AMD is nowhere to be seen. That is nearly 15K devices on Intel just from a small company under Microsoft. Imagine what other companies are doing....

Intel is fine but they cannot be fine forever
I've had nothing but Intel-based laptops at work, but then again it's Dell.
 

yuri69

Senior member
Jul 16, 2013
554
997
136
  • Intel had the lead in server for a couple of weeks until Turin launched. They're far closer now than before, but it's still going to be a tough task to stop AMD from advancing.
  • It's not super tiny niche, that's only super high end desktop systems.
    • Not sure if we're looking at the same charts, but Intel has regressed as much as it has gained in performance with ARL.
  • dGPU is on life support. Integrated is looking better but they need some actual volume design wins for that to matter (e.g., steam deck).
  • Agreed. Biggest thing is they need real customers which they hope to start to get in 2 years time. It's gonna be rough until then, maybe longer if they can't convince people on 14A.
  • They are doing pretty well on laptop, they just need to get back on their own nodes to help with margins.
* Intel *still* rides all the OEMs after all those years when AMD offered far more competitive products than now.
* Desktops aka the big boxes sitting at a desk are a niche - even detachable x-in-ones are larger
* dGPUs other than nVidia are on life support in general - AMD's been delaying their next-gen which even got the highend segment canned completely...
* I got no clue about their margins
 

tsamolotoff

Senior member
May 19, 2019
211
421
136
These guys have some huge issue with their ryzens, I can say that just by looking at their FPS in Starfield and Cyberpunk, my own is like 50% higher

Code:
24-10-2024, 20:12:49 Starfield.exe benchmark completed, 3083 frames rendered in 22.000 s
                     Average framerate  :  140.1 FPS
                     Minimum framerate  :  132.1 FPS
                     Maximum framerate  :  154.9 FPS
                     1% low framerate   :  109.3 FPS
                     0.1% low framerate :   99.8 FPS
 

Abwx

Lifer
Apr 2, 2011
11,591
4,408
136
  • Intel had the lead in server for a couple of weeks until Turin launched.
They had the lead because for the Intel review Phoronix removed all benches where Intel was performing unexpectedly bad, so he got an average of 1107 for the Intel chip and 990 for the AMD, but once he added those benches in the following reviews there was no more any lead as the real scores were actualy 1007 vs 1005 for the compared AMD chip.


 

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Meteor Late

Member
Dec 15, 2023
48
45
51
I've seen Geekbench 6 is roughly on par with 14900K in single core, correct? this looks at a wide range of workloads so it's more indicative of overall performance instead of Cinebench which is more of less rendering and that's it.

All I miss is Spec, so I can definitely say it's barely an improvement in single core. Hopefully Geekerwan releases a video soon.
 

511

Senior member
Jul 12, 2024
745
659
96
Foundry will either save Intel in a couple years or completely take the rest of it down with itself. They are sacrificing the whole Intel products side to fund it. Oh they also have to fix the cpu uarch, soc design issues and build a competitive AI offering
Their designs were being carried by foundry tbh till 14nm debacle now design needs to perform Hope Glenn Hilton gives us a repeat of Nehlam
 

maddie

Diamond Member
Jul 18, 2010
4,896
4,982
136
AMD employs older style chiplet interconnect. Physical wires connecting die-to-die routed thru the substrate itself. Intel employs more advanced packaging (stacking) where the chiplets sit on the interposer which in turn sits on top of the substrate itself. That is the technical distinction between the two imho.
You are a software guy, correct?
 

Bouowmx

Golden Member
Nov 13, 2016
1,150
553
146
Check of derBauer on Youtube, in the last few minutes he talks about that topic with more to come.
Interesting DLVR behavior. If DLVR is bypassed (voltage from VRM is not stepped down by DLVR), CPU power consumption is reduced. But this may reduce VRM efficiency because it has to step down more from 12V.
 
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