Lunar Lake Packs Big Efficiency Boost

Author: Dylan Mcgrath

 
Lunar Lake Packs Big Efficiency Boost
 

Intel’s Lunar Lake, the biggest overhaul of its architecture for PC processors since the addition of efficiency cores (E-cores) with Alder Lake, promises a big leap in power efficiency that may nullify AMD’s long-standing advantage in this metric. It marks the first appearance of Intel’s newest neural processing unit (NPU), promising four times the raw AI processing power of its predecessor, and it will be the first Intel processor without any critical circuits manufactured by Intel.

As opposed to 2023’s Meteor Lake and 2022’s Raptor Lake, which featured mostly incremental improvements, Lunar Lake contains significant changes throughout. The design prioritizes efficiency, tasking the E-cores with doing more of the heavy lifting than Intel’s previous hybrid compute architectures. Lunar Lake’s performance core (P-core), Lion Cove, was overhauled for efficiency with many key features removed. For instance, Lion Cove omits hyperthreading and other key features of previous generations to improve efficiency, including transactional synchronization extensions and advanced matrix extensions.

Disclosure of Lunar Lake’s architectural details, including an NPU capable of 48 TOPS, makes Intel the third company (after Qualcomm and AMD) to announce silicon compliant with Microsoft’s requirement of an NPU with at least 40 TOPS to power Copilot+ PCs featuring Microsoft’s advanced AI capabilities.

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