Intel Core M chip unveiled: Say hello to thin, fanless hybrid notebooks..
The 2002's Tablet PC
was a thick and clunky eight-year early tablet based around Windows XP
Tablet Edition and failed to get any traction outside of businesses.
Both
companies made a fatal error at the time – they believed that people
wanted tablets to do everything that a PC could. And, of course, that
meant running Windows. Caught off guard by Apple's iPad, both companies
knew they needed to do something.
The merits of Microsoft's Windows 8
efforts aside, Intel's strategy was to go after the lightweight fanless
market with Atom and a spin on Ultrabooks with 2-in-1 tablet designs
(like Lenovo's Yoga range and Surface Pro 3, for example), essentially tablets with detachable keyboards
The
Atom experiment was a disaster; some of the designs from well-known
OEMs offered an extremely poor user experience for using Windows 8. The
CPU just wasn't up to the job.
The 2-in-1 market, however, is a
sizable area of potential gain for Intel. The market is still very
young, but the signs are encouraging – 50 per cent of people that have
bought a 2-in-1 say they were previously considering a tablet, while
there are more 70 system designs now on the market across all screen
sizes. 2-in-1s are for people that still want to use x86 and x64 apps
and have a device that can be used as a tablet.
While
Intel has long produced CULV (Consumer Ultra-Low Voltage) processors
for tablets including the Haswell Core i3, i5 and i7 variants in the Surface Pro 3, something still needed to change. Intel has the computing power, but battery life was a major weakness until now.
Enter the 14 nanometer die shrink of Haswell.
Codenamed Broadwell, this is a launch that – relatively unusually for
Intel in recent times - has been delayed, and after originally being
promised the bulk of the CPUs (including those for desktops and full
laptops) in late 2014, these will most likely hit in early 2015 (Intel
says they "will be in volume production before year end"). We expect
them to see a full launch at CES 2015.
But today sees an advance party for Broadwell in the form of Intel Core M.
These Broadwell CPUs are designed specifically for tablets and 2-in-1s
as well as very thin laptops (whether they'll fit into the Ultraboook
category remains to be seen).
And they're fanless, yet with
Core-level performance. The key to this is 14nm die shrink that has
enabled the TDP (thermal design power) of the system-on-chip to sink
below 6W and even down to 4.5W depending on design.
This
compares to TDPs of 17-18W only a couple of years ago. Improved
packaging also enables more compact designs – the equivalent Haswell
Core package was 960mm^2, whereas Core M's packaging is almost half
that. This translates into designs that are designs that are thinner
than 9mm.
Intel sees the biggest market for 2-in-1s are people who bought a PC around 3-5 years ago and who are now looking to upgrade.
Intel
also believes Core M powered devices can entice those who were
previously just looking for an Android or iOS tablet, but who value the
multitasking value of Windows, flexible file storage and capabilities of
a full Windows PC.
Core M is available in dual core versions for
now, the latter having 1.3 billion transistors. 4MB of L3 Cache is
shared across the cores and the on-die graphics. Core M utilises Intel's
HD 5300 Graphics which supports resolutions up to 4K (3,840 vs 2,160).
There
are three variants of the Core M; 5Y70, 5Y10a and 5Y10 (capable of
going to 4W). The key difference is the clock – 2.6Ghz for the 5Y70,
while the others are 2.0Ghz. All these chips are dual-core, four thread
processors but expect some other variants as time goes on.
With
Core M, Intel is promising performance improvements for graphics and
video of 7% and a more modest increase of around 2% for productivity
tasks over 'a four year-old notebook' – that's comparing a Core M-5Y70
with the Core i5-520UM chip. The key thing here though is that there has
been a significant reduction in TDP, 18W vs 4.5W.
That
power reduction means a significant uplift in battery life – Intel is
talking somewhere in the region if 1.7 hours versus a previous
generation system. As you can see from this chart, the main power
consumer is the screen (no surprise), but Broadwell brings a distinct
saving when it comes to the system-on-chip as well as, interestingly,
audio. This is down to Intel's SmartSound audio processing technology
that enables features such as wake -on-voice.
Also
part of the Core M platform is 802.11ac wireless (Intel Wireless-AC
7265) and 5Y70 is compatible with Intel's vPro for business deployments,
Windows InstantGo and Platform Trust Technology. There's also support
for Intel's Rapid Storage tech.
As for pricing, Intel is
predictably talking about the 2-in-1 market predominantly – machines
around the $900 mark (around £550, AU$950). But Intel reckons Core M
could easily be homed in cheaper tablets – those around the $500 mark
(around £300, AU$530) - and we'll have to wait to see what OEMs announce
in due course.
Intel says somewhere in the region of 20 system
designs are being developed using Core M and a handful of systems will
arrive in October across both consumer and business SKUs. The first of
these – launched at IFA 2014 - is the new-generation Lenovo ThinkPad Helix 2 in 1 that clocks in at 800g. It's 9.6mm thick, with a 11.6-inch Full HD display.
No comments:
Post a Comment