Software

AI + ML

Intel's 120 TOPS Lunar Lake AI PC chips have landed

And all it took was some good old fashioned outsourcing to TSMC


Intel's first chips to exceed Microsoft's lofty Copilot+ performance target have arrived, promising up to 120 TOPS of AI performance across an improved CPU, GPU and NPU. This development brought to you by the move to jump ship to TSMC.

Intel's new Core Ultra 200V mobile processors, which launched ahead of the IFA conference in Berlin this week, are actually being outsourced to TSMC for manufacturing and constructed using the x86 giant's Foveros 3D packaging tech.

Intel has been a TSMC customer for years for things like GPUs, NICs, and AI accelerators. When it came to CPUs, however, the chipmaker has almost exclusively handled manufacturing in-house. As CEO Pat Gelsinger noted during Intel's disastrous Q2 earnings call last month, this decision is really a stopgap until its Foundry division can ramp its 20A and 18A process tech with products expected to return home in the 2026 time period.

This decision doesn't appear to have had an adverse impact on the chip's performance. In fact, quite the opposite, Intel previously claimed instruction per clock gains of 14 percent for its performance cores and a whopping 68 percent for its efficiency cores this time around.

The chip's Xe2-based graphics processor is also said to be roughly 50 percent faster than the one found in Meteor Lake, while also churning out 67 TOPS of INT8 compute. Lunar Lake also boasts a much improved neural processing unit (NPU) capable of another 48 TOPS of AI performance, up from the roughly 11 TOPS found in prior-gen Meteor Lake parts.

We took a closer look at the architecture back at Computex, but that puts it just over the finish line for Microsoft's 40 TOPS AI PC spec, revealed alongside Qualcomm's X Elite launch earlier this year.

Compared to AMD, Intel says its chips achieve similar performance on graphics-heavy tasks like gaming while consuming about 30 percent less power, while against Qualcomm, they say the chips manage 25 percent higher performance while consuming half the power. With that said, we recommend taking any vendor's performance claims with a healthy dose of salt.

With four P-cores, four E-cores, eight GPU cores and on package memory, Lunar Lake looks conspicuously like an x86 spin on Apple's M1 and M2 SoCs from a few years back. In fact, for this generation, Intel has ditched Hyperthreading — a mainstay of x86 processors for years — entirely.

However, unlike Apple's equivalent M-series parts, Intel is sticking with a chiplet architecture, albeit a much simpler one than Meteor Lake, with just two logic dies — one for the CPU, GPU, and NPU and one which handles I/O and security functionality.

In addition to higher performance, Intel claims the part is also substantially more efficient, with system on chip power down 50 percent from the last generation and with CVP of Client Engineering claiming that notebooks with 20 hours of battery life in real world use are possible using the chip. "Lunar Lake is the most efficient x86 processor ever," Jim Johnson said.

However, similarities with Apple's SoCs also mean that the LPDDR5 memory is now packaged alongside the compute dies, which means you'll have to choose between 16GB or 32GB at checkout. And if you need more than that, you're out of luck, for now anyway.

Intel is leaning heavily into the AI PC marketing. And the chip shop isn't just talking about being able to tie into Microsoft's Copilot+ functionality. Intel also touted it would support running local AI models under Chrome OS as well.

However, those excited to take advantage of these chips for features like Cocreator for Paint or Recall will have to wait a little longer. According to Intel, Copilot+ features won't be activated until November.

Intel says Lunar Lake will be available in more than 80 PCs from more than 20 vendors including Dell, HP, and Lenovo to name a few starting Sept. 24. ®

Send us news
13 Comments

Qualcomm guns for Intel, AMD with cheaper 8-core X chips

It’s set to slice up the AI PC competition at $700-$900

Intel Arrow Lake to be made elsewhere as 20A process node canned

Meanwhile, Broadcom reportedly displeased with 18A wafers

Buying a PC for local AI? These are the specs that actually matter

If you guessed TOPS and FLOPS, that's only half right

Dow-ward spiral: Intel share price drop could see it delisted from blue-chip index

50% dive in market cap during 2024 forcing CEO Pat Gelsinger to revisit strategy

Gelsinger opens up about Intel troubles amid talk of possible split

From spinoffs to layoffs and a boardroom revolt, 2024 isn't going great for Chipzilla

Intel enlists Morgan Stanley to defend against activist investors

Multiple lawsuits doesn't mean investors are coming for the board yet, but better safe than sorry, right?

Intel's Software Guard Extensions broken? Don't panic

More of a storm in a teacup

Missing Fujitsu PCs? It's back with a fresh lineup of 16 models

Business left Europe last year, but remains ticking away

Another law firm piles on Intel for Raptor Lake CPU failures as complaints grow louder

Meanwhile, a boutique PC builder says Intel didn’t even need to chase high clock speeds

Dell's all-in bet on AI pays off in latest earnings

The term was mentioned over 140 times during the earnings call

AMD reverses course: Ryzen 3000 CPUs will get SinkClose patch after all

Still no love for 1000- or 2000-series

AMD's Victor Peng: AI thirst for power underscores the need for efficient silicon

Moore's Law may be running out of steam, but there are still knobs to turn and levers to pull