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"Intel Lists Xeon W-1300 CPUs: Rocket Lake for Workstations". Tom's Hardware This page was last edited on 15 May 2022, at ...
Rocket Lake has up to eight cores, down from 10 cores for Comet Lake. It features Intel Xe graphics, and PCIe 4.0 support. [6] Only a single M.2 drive is supported in PCIe 4.0 mode, while all the rest are wired via PCIe 3.0. [7] Intel officially launched the Rocket Lake desktop family on March 16, 2021, with sales commencing on March 30. [8]
Ice Lake-SP: server-only successor to Cascade Lake, using 10 nm process, released in April 2021 [5] [13] Cypress Cove Backport of Sunny Cove to Intel's 14 nm process Rocket Lake: Successor to Comet Lake, using Intel's 14++ nm process, released on March 30, 2021 [14] [15] [16] Willow Cove
Despite this lower bandwidth in reading and writing data, the latency of Lion Cove accessing L3 data has been reduced from 75-cycles to 51-cycles in Lunar Lake. [8] However, Lion Cove in Arrow Lake suffers from much higher latency at 84-cycles due to a longer ring bus design as its L3 cache is being shared by both its P-cores and E-cores. [ 13 ]
Pentium III Xeon 500: 500 MHz 512 KB: 100 MT/s 5× 2.0 V 36 W Slot 2; March 17, 1999 $931 [4] Pentium III Xeon 500: 500 MHz 1 MB 100 MT/s 5× 2.0 V 44 W Slot 2;
The first Xeon-based machine to be in the first place of the TOP500 was the Chinese Tianhe-IA in November 2010, which used a mixed Xeon-Nvidia GPU configuration; it was overtaken by the Japanese K computer in 2012, but the Tianhe-2 system using 12-core Xeon E5-2692 processors and Xeon Phi cards occupied the first place in both TOP500 lists of 2013.
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Intel first unveiled Golden Cove during their Architecture Day 2020, [6] with further details released at the same event in August 2021. [7] Similar to Skylake, Golden Cove was described by Intel as a major update to the core microarchitecture, with Intel stating that it would "allow performance for the next decade of compute".