Tag Archive for: lineup

Intel’s Skylake lineup is robbing us of the performance king we deserve

Intel’s range of sixth-generation Core processors, codenamed Skylake, is now public. And boy, am I disappointed.

Most of the fifth-generation Core processors have successors, at least approximately. The Broadwell generation’s rollout was slow and messy, with Intel apparently struggling to get its 14nm manufacturing process as refined and as reliable as it wanted. The announced Skylake lineup is more complete, and it shouldn’t take so long to come to market, so that’s an improvement. But amid all that Broadwell mess was a truly monstrous chip: an almost mythical beast, the Core i7 5775C. What made this part so special? It paired two features. One is mundane: the processor is socketed rather than soldered, meaning that enthusiasts can use it in self-built systems, pairing it with the precise range of components that they want.

The other is rather more exotic: the chip has Iris Pro graphics, and with it, 128MB of eDRAM. Crack open the processor and it has not one big chip in its package but two, with the eDRAM nestled alongside the processor itself. The RAM is primarily there to accelerate graphics operations, but Intel’s design means that it is not dedicated to this task. For Broadwell, it functions as a large, high bandwidth level 4 cache (the other 3 levels being part of the processor chip itself). Skylake shakes up the design somewhat, changing the topology and allowing the eDRAM to cache even more stuff, but the effect is still the same: a monstrously large cache for a mainstream commodity processor.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Ars Technica » Technology Lab

17% of adult Internet users couldn’t pick Bill Gates out of a lineup

Oh, sure, he’s not in the news quite as often as when he was running Microsoft day to day, but Bill Gates – richest man in the world – remains one of the most famous people on the planet.

Yet nearly 1 in 5 adult Internet users were unable to identify Gates as the man pictured above, despite the multiple-choice format, according to a “Web IQ” quiz of 1,006 people conducted by PewResearch.

I would have thought the question not worth asking. I was wrong.

By the way, if you’d like to take the quiz yourself, you can find it here.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Network World Paul McNamara