Available on laptops this fall, Intel has announced its new 11th General Tiger Lake CPU


Intel has officially announced its first 11th General Tiger Lake processors for laptops, which will have a bigger leap in performance and battery life than the company’s new Integrated Xe graphics, Thunderbolt 4 support, Wi-Fi 6, and previous Ice Lake chips. The company claims that the new 11th General lineup offers the best processor for “thin – and – light” laptops.

Intel is introducing nine new 11th general designs for both its U-Series (now known as Intel UP3) and Y-Series Class chips (aka UP4), which offer a base speed of 3.0 GHz. , An increase in maximum single core turbo up to 4.8GHz and an all-core boost up to a maximum of 4.3GHz. It also has the most powerful version of Intel’s Iris Z integrated graphics with CC CU and maximum graphics speed of 1.35GHz.

Intel 11th General Tiger Lake Chips

Model Cores / threads Graphics Graphics (EU) Watts Base frequency (GHz) Single core turbo (GHz) All Core Turbo (GHz) Cash
Model Cores / threads Graphics Graphics (EU) Watts Base frequency (GHz) Single core turbo (GHz) All Core Turbo (GHz) Cash
Core i7-1185G7 4c / 8t Intel Iris Z. 96 12-28W 3.0 8.8 3.3 12 MB
Core i7-1165G7 4c / 8t Intel Iris Z. 96 12-28W . 2. 7.7 4.1 12 MB
Core i5-1135G7 4c / 8t Intel Iris Z. 80 12-28W 2.4 2.3 8.8 8 MB
Core i3-1125G4 4c / 8t Intel UHD graphics 48 12-28W 2.0 7.7 3.3 8 MB
Core i3-1115G4 2c / 4t Intel UHD graphics 48 12-28W 3.0 4.1 4.1 8 MB
Core i7-1160G7 4c / 8t Intel Iris Z. 96 7-15 w 1. 1.2 4.4 6.6 12 MB
Core i5-1130G7 4c / 8t Intel Iris Z. 80 7-15 w 1.1 4.0 4.4 8 MB
Core i3-1120G4 4c / 8t Intel UHD graphics 48 7-15 w 1.1 3.0 8 MB
Core i3-1110G4 2c / 4t Intel UHD graphics 48 7-15 w 1.8 9.9 Is 3.9 6 MB

The company previewed the new chips at its Architecture Day 2020 event earlier this year. The new 11th Gen lineup is built on the same 10nm node as the current 10th Gen Ice Lake models, but it upgrades to the willow core architecture with a new “10nm superfin design” that Intel says will provide better momentum in lower power consumption. .

Intel is not very clear about what these additions will be, but it promises that the new chips will provide a 20 percent faster pace for day-to-day “office fee productivity” tasks, as well as a “20 percent increase in the system.” -Level power, ”which says that things like video streaming come with more than extra hours of battery life.

Intel is making a big bet on its new integrated Xe graphics, which it promises will double the graphics performance, and which Intel says will provide a more significant benefit than just increasing the raw core count (one field, coincidentally, AMD is currently ahead of Intel.) The demo featured during Intel’s announcement showed the 11th General chip offering the same or better graphics performance than the 10th Gen chip working simultaneously with the Nvidia MX350 GPU. (On the one hand, you’ll need Intel’s new i5 or i7 chips to get Xe graphics – Core i3 models from both the U- and Y-Series lineups will only offer Intel UHD graphics.)

There is also new support for 8K HDR displays, with the option to use four 4K HDR displays simultaneously. There’s also improvements to the built-in AI engine, which Intel says will provide a definite improvement for video calls (such as background blurring) – a function that ARM-based computers like the Surface Pro X have previously excelled at.

With the new chips, Intel is launching a new iteration of its project Athena certification standard, called the “Intel Evo”. Evo will also have higher requirements, guaranteeing that your laptop will use more than nine hours of “real world” on a single charge (for realP5 systems), fast charging (for four hours in minutes0 minutes), Wi-Fi 6 and Thunderbolt. 4, and the system wakes up “in less than a second”. The idea is that whenever an Evo logo is guaranteed users should expect a high quality machine. Intel says more than 20 Evo-verified designs should be available by the end of this year.

Expect to see new chips on a variety of systems in the coming days and weeks, Intel will promise more than 150 designs with the 11th General Intel Core processors from companies like Acer, Asus, Dell, Dynabook, HP, Lenovo, LG, MSI. Razor, and Samsung. The first of these products, such as Samsung’s Galaxy Book Flex 5G, Acer’s refreshed Swift 5 and Swift 3, and Asus’s new Zen Book, have been announced as early as this fall.