Thursday, 5 July 2018

Intel Coffee Lake-X release date, news and rumors

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Before we dive into any of this, let’s just get one thing out of the way: Intel Coffee Lake-X isn’t confirmed to exist in any way, shape or form. This is all just speculation at this point.

Intel has had a rough couple of years. Ever since the onset of AMD Ryzen and Threadripper, Intel has been on the defensive – haphazardly throwing out CPU refreshes to keep ahead of AMD. 

In 2017, when AMD released the first generation of Ryzen Threadripper, Intel responded with Skylake-X, which topped out with the $1,979 (£1,649, AU$2,729) 18-core 36-thread Core i9-7980XE. Luckily for Intel, it out-powered the Threadripper 1950X, but only barely.

Fast forward to 2018 and AMD is rumored to release the Threadripper 2990X at around $1,700 (£1,300, AU$2,300) according to a recent pricing leak. This rumored processor will supposedly be a 32-core, 64-core behemoth. If it’s actually real, Intel is going to want to come out with something to compete.

Enter Coffee Lake-X. 

Now, Coffee Lake-X supposedly existed at one point, only to be later cancelled by Intel, according to some speculation from the Motley Fool. However, seeing how Intel Cascade Lake-X is going to be a server-based platform, rather than the new High-end desktop (HEDT) platform, that leaves Intel with nothing to compete with the Ryzen Threadripper 2nd Generation processors set to come out later this year. We think Intel has something up its sleeve.

We don’t have any concrete information at this point – we don’t even know if it’ll be called Coffee Lake-X, but that doesn’t mean we can’t speculate. So, keep this page bookmarked, as we’ll update it as soon as we get more information.

Cut to the chase

  • What is it? Intel’s potential next HEDT platform
  • When is it out? TBD
  • What will it cost? TBD

Release date

This is where things get a little hard to predict. If our earlier speculation is true, and Intel uses Coffee Lake-X to compete with Threadripper 2nd Generation, we might see an announcement soon – the first Threadripper 2nd Generation  chips are slated to release in Q3 2018.

However, because it’s hard to even find rumors about Coffee Lake-X at this point, we might not see Intel’s answer to Threadripper 2nd Generation until early 2019 – unless it releases some binned Xeon chips.

Intel supposedly confirmed a forthcoming X399 chipset, which would likely be the chipset that would support Coffee Lake-X, but we have no idea when that’s coming out, either.

We’ll just have to wait until Intel to make some kind of announcement about the release date of its next HEDT platform.

Specs

This is where things get interesting. Now, we have no idea what the Coffee Lake-X chips are going to look like, but they have to be basically better than Skylake-X, which is already absolutely bananas. If you need a refresher, the specs for the 7th-generation HEDT processors are as as follows:

  • Core i9-7900X: 10-cores, 20-threads at 3.3GHz 
  • Core i9-7920X: 12-cores, 24-threads at 2.9GHz 
  • Core i9-7940X: 14-cores, 28-threads at 3.1GHz 
  • Core i9-7960X: 16-cores, 32-threads at 4.2GHz 
  • Core i9-7980XE: 18-cores, 36-threads at 2.6GHz 

That last one, the Core i9-7980XE was the most powerful consumer processor of the last year, and still is at the time of this writing. However, that processor costs nearly $2,000. Remember that rumor we mentioned earlier about the 32-core, 64-thread AMD Threadripper 2990X that’s supposedly launching for less than that?

That’s exactly what Intel is going to need top with Coffee Lake-X. Earlier, at Computex 2018, Intel showed off a 28-core 56-thread CPU clocked at 5GHz. And, while that processor later turned out to be a Cascade Lake-X processor with a completely different LGA-3647 socket, that might actually be what Intel needs to release – and for much less than the rumored $10,000 that processor might end up costing

At the end of the day, we won’t know what Intel’s next line of HEDT processors is going to look like until it’s actually announced, but we do know that if Intel is going to stay competitive after Threadripper 2 comes out, it will need to come out with some beefy CPUs at a competitive price. And, you can rest assured that the moment Intel does that, we’ll update this page with any relevant information.



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