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Thursday, June 11, 2020

Intel's Lakefield Chips Are Here to Unlock New Laptop Designs, Including Foldable PCs - Medium

Jun 11 · 3 min read

‘Lakefield’ will appear first inside Samsung’s Galaxy Book S, going on sale this month in select markets. It will also power Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Fold, a laptop with a bendable screen.

By Michael Kan

Intel has finally launched its “Lakefield” system on a chip (SoC) family, which features a tiny silicon footprint and opens the door for new PC designs.

Lakefield represents the company’s smallest processors with Intel Core performance to power Windows 10 devices. According to Intel, the chips will feature a package that measures approximately 12mm square. It can reduce the overall motherboard inside a laptop by up to 47 percent, versus what’s required for an 8th-generation Intel Core chip.

Lakefield will first appear later this month inside Samsung’s Galaxy Book S, a 2-pound laptop that’s approximately half an inch thick. So far, no pricing has been cited for that device. But for some perspective, last year’s model of the Galaxy Book S went on sale starting at $999 and featured a Qualcomm Snapdragon chip.

Credit: Samsung

Consumers will also be able to find Lakefield silicon in Lenovo’s upcoming ThinkPad X1 Fold, billed as a foldable PC. (See our hands-on preview of the Fold at the link.) That product, pictured below, is basically a laptop/tablet hybrid with a bendable 13.3-inch OLED panel that covers one side of the device. At CES 2020, Lenovo said the product’s starting price will come in at $2,500.

Foveros: Layering on the Silicon\

The chip-stacking approach, designed with connections through the layers, can also create a more power-efficient processor, extending a laptop’s or other device’s battery life. According to Intel, a Lakefield chip can reduce a device’s standby power consumption by up to 91 percent when compared to an 8th-generation Intel processor.

The Lakefield SoCs also feature a unique five-core, five-thread setup. A single 10-nanometer (nm) “Sunny Cove” core on the chip can handle the heavy-lifting applications, while four 10nm “Tremont” cores can be leveraged for less-intensive computing tasks. In a sense, this “hybrid” approach, as Intel terms it, resembles the so-called “big.LITTLE” architectural arrangements that have been employed for some time in the high-end mobile processors used in today’s flagship smartphones.

Two Flavors of Lakefield, to Start

Credit: Intel

Both chips require only 7 watts of power, significantly less than the 15-watt and 25-watt 10th-generation “ Ice Lake” chips Intel launched last year. In addition, the Lakefield processors can also be configured to support Wi-Fi 6 and an LTE modem.

Today’s announcement from Intel may feel a bit lackluster, seeing as only two Lakefield-adopting products were name-checked. But Intel expects the Lakefield chips to unlock more innovation in the PC industry at a time when Microsoft and other vendors are working on foldable and dual-screen laptops and tablets.


Originally published at https://www.pcmag.com.

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