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Intel Hardware

Intel's 13th-Gen 'Raptor Lake' CPUs Are Official, Launch October 20 (arstechnica.com) 45

Codenamed Raptor Lake, Intel says it has made some improvements to the CPU architecture and the Intel 7 manufacturing process, but the strategy for improving their performance is both time-tested and easy to understand: add more cores, and make them run at higher clock speeds. From a report: Intel is announcing three new CPUs today, each with and without integrated graphics (per usual, the models with no GPUs have an "F" at the end): the Core i9-13900K, Core i7-13700K, and Core i5-13600K will launch on October 20 alongside new Z790 chipsets and motherboards. They will also work in all current-generation 600-series motherboards as long as your motherboard maker has provided a BIOS update, and will continue to support both DDR4 and DDR5 memory.

Raptor Lake uses the hybrid architecture that Intel introduced in its 12th-generation Alder Lake chips last year -- a combination of large performance cores (P-cores) that keep games and other performance-sensitive applications running quickly, plus clusters of smaller efficiency cores (E-cores) that use less power -- though in our testing across laptops and desktops, it's clear that "efficiency" is more about the number of cores can be fit into a given area on a CPU die, and less about lower overall system power consumption. There have been a handful of other additions as well. The amount of L2 cache per core has been nearly doubled, going from 1.25MB to 2MB per P-core and from 2MB to 4MB per E-core cluster (E-cores always come in clusters of four). The CPUs will officially support DDR5-5600 RAM, up from a current maximum of DDR5-4800, though that DDR5-4800 maximum can easily be surpassed with XMP memory kits in 12th-generation motherboards. The maximum officially supported DDR4 RAM speed remains DDR4-3200, though the caveat about XMP applies there as well. As far as core counts and frequencies go, the Core i5 and Core i7 CPUs each pick up one extra E-core cluster, going from four E-cores to eight. The Core i9 gets two new E-core clusters, boosting the core count from eight all the way up to 16. All E-cores have maximum boost clocks that are 400MHz higher than they were before.

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Intel's 13th-Gen 'Raptor Lake' CPUs Are Official, Launch October 20

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  • Security (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Cool Hands Leia ( 10159653 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @01:27PM (#62918383)
    How well do they study the security of such a processor these days before they give the all-OK on a Spectre-like vuln?
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Intel? Not at all. They hope their fanbois will not look and if something bad comes up will ignore it. So far that strategy has worked out well for them.

      • By 'fanbois' I'm assuming you're referring in kind to some 3-letter agency, since speculative execution became a 'feature' after the Clipper chip controversy got a little too hot...

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          While I think this is a nice conspiracy theory, I do not think it pans out. Intel did this all by themselves because really the only thing they have (well had) going was speed. Most people are stupid and cannot understand details, so all they looked at was speed when making a buying decision. Hence Intel optimized very hard for speed and ignored everything else. AMD did know about the risks of speculative execution at the same time as Intel did and decided to be a lot more careful (Ever noted that the publi

          • Agreed, but IF Intel themselves are still making hardware that is vulnerable, then it's not so much a theory anymore.

            I hope not, and not just for speeds sake.

            • by gweihir ( 88907 )

              Agreed, but IF Intel themselves are still making hardware that is vulnerable, then it's not so much a theory anymore.

              I hope not, and not just for speeds sake.

              Agreed.

          • I don't understand these CPU-level security vulnerabilities. It seems to me that some Internet application using JavaScript in the browser doesn't have that kind of low-level CPU access to exploit such vulnerabilities. And if a piece of malware made it onto my computer to exploit the CPU, well since it made it to launch some process on my computer in the first place, I already lost, with or without CPU exploit. It also sounds like these exploits are extremely hard to weaponize, because you can't really targ

            • by gweihir ( 88907 )

              I don't understand these CPU-level security vulnerabilities. It seems to me that some Internet application using JavaScript in the browser doesn't have that kind of low-level CPU access to exploit such vulnerabilities.

              Actually, it does. There are enough papers and text on this. Don't be lazy read up on the issue.

            • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

              It seems to me that some Internet application using JavaScript in the browser doesn't have that kind of low-level CPU access to exploit such vulnerabilities.

              That's what I thought too. Read the Spectre paper [spectreattack.com] (and behold the impressive quality of today's Javascript compilers).

          • You continue to spread this misinformation. It's disgusting. Stop it.

            If I must, I will produce a comprehensive list of AMD CPU vulnerabilities, including notable faux pas [bleepingcomputer.com] they made when they claimed that retpoline would make their processors safe, where Arm and Intel produced architectural fixes that actually worked. (whoops, turns out they were wrong there, and Intel was right).
            Here is just a start [cipher.com].
            Bored security researchers are now tearing into AMD's microarch looking for branch misprediction and spec
            • by gweihir ( 88907 )

              Please include practically working demonstration code for AMD. All I have ever seen for AMD is plausibility arguments and some estimates what amount of time would actually be needed for some of the attacks. None of these estimates made them practical. It is, of course, still important to know about them, because somebody can have an idea to make the attacks a lot more effective.

              But I guess you lack the insight to actually see what is going on. Here is a hint: There is a massive difference between a known vu

              • Please include practically working demonstration code for AMD. All I have ever seen for AMD is plausibility arguments and some estimates what amount of time would actually be needed for some of the attacks. None of these estimates made them practical. It is, of course, still important to know about them, because somebody can have an idea to make the attacks a lot more effective.

                Please include practically working demonstration code for Intel (that isn't Meltdown).
                All Spectre code is essentially only PoC- which 1 link I provided contained. Seems you didn't read them.
                I'd hate for you to run into information that causes you cognitive dissonance.

                But I guess you lack the insight to actually see what is going on. Here is a hint: There is a massive difference between a known vulnerability, a vulnerability that has exploit code and a vulnerability that has _practical_ exploit code.

                Lack insight? Horseshit. I have clarity, you have the cloudy fever dreams of a fanboi.
                Here's a hint for you, shithead. There is an article on this very fucking site that contains links to 2 of my CVEs for the linux kernel.
                You have no idea w

    • Re:Security (Score:4, Funny)

      by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @01:54PM (#62918453) Homepage

      What they lack in performance they make up for in winter heating. They started measuring the TDP in BTUs this year.

      • For years I ran antminers during the winter to offset the heating bill, and then would sell them off in the spring to get the latest version again in the fall.

        Electricity is relatively cheap in WA state, it actually lowered my heating bill versus the natural gas heater. Just opened up the central heating return air duct in my garage and piped the exhaust from the antiminers into the duct system. The heater would only come on if the temp was 25F. I stopped doing it couple years ago, but I had 50 amps ins

        • Just opened up the central heating return air duct in my garage and piped the exhaust from the antiminers into the duct system.

          Who installed your HVAC system? Mickey mouse? I find it hard to believe this would pass inspection anywhere.

        • What about the low-end, for gaming? I'm thinking i3 12100F right now, is there something on AMD's side that can compete on both price and power requirements? (i.e. around 150$CAD and around 60 watts)

          I need a new motherboard and RAM either way, so right now I don't even care if I go with AMD or intel.

    • It took 2 years for hackers to weaponize the vulnerability. It took one month for Intel to release a patch.
      • by crow ( 16139 )

        It's all partial patches, and some of the patches have significant performance penalties. As far as I'm aware, they've done nothing to actually fix the problem, as a real fix would likely also have performance problems.

  • by Osgeld ( 1900440 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @01:35PM (#62918403)

    Yes there are applications that can use the amount of power being offered by a new generation of processors, and yes we are all glad your core 2 duo runs everything you want using some version of linux

    • Seems like most of the highly parallel tasks that a newer generation of processors would do well at is handled even better by GPU cores if the code was optimized for it. And Intel quit that game before they even really got started.

  • by Kelxin ( 3417093 ) on Tuesday September 27, 2022 @01:44PM (#62918433)
    Until Intel and Microsoft can fix their E core issue with Hyper-V, these processors don't even exist in my world.
  • Am I reading those core counts right?

    As far as core counts and frequencies go, the Core i5 and Core i7 CPUs each pick up one extra E-core cluster, going from four E-cores to eight. The Core i9 gets two new E-core clusters, boosting the core count from eight all the way up to 16.

    The Core i9 goes from 8 E-Cores to 16 E-Cores... and only 8 P-Cores???

    The Core i7 has the same amount of E-Cores as it does P-Cores, 8 each...

    With the Core i5 also having 8 E-Cores, but only 6 P-Cores, it follows the Core i9 wi

  • All these tech names are ridiculous. What is wrong with these people? Just use numbers.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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