coercitiv
Diamond Member
- Jan 24, 2014
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I'm not pleasantly surprised by Skylake-S power usage, but let's not get overboard here: Intel is looking to improve perf/watt especially in the mobile sector, where frequencies are much lower, most chips hover near the 3Ghz mark. Moreover, most of their chips have base frequencies around 2Ghz, so their efficiency sweet spot must lie between these two values.you realize that Skylake is not offering any significant performance/watt improvement over its predecessor.
*snip*
One area where Intel have improved over the years is in reducing platform idle power consumption, and this is obviously important for battery operated toys. But my feel is that Intel have reached diminishing returns, and I for one would be surprised if upcoming Skylake notebooks offer tangible improvement over Broadwell.
You do make a point though: if Skylake is to be a worthy successor for Broadwell in the mobile sector, it must improve load power consumption. (lower power at same performance, same power for more performance)