Quote from: adrian on August 02, 2015, 17:42:25
That's a lot of work in there but there's no way easy to read and compare the charts.
Anyway, Carrizo needs higher TDP limit to see it's potential as it is 28nm part. I have a Celeron 1000m laptop from a 22nm generation but the TDP is around 35 watts. This thing is fast despite the low cost and Celeron branding.
High TDP in a laptop is still useful when it is plugged in. Laptops at home, I reckon, are usually powered from the wall.
I just feel bad for Carrizzo though, it looks great on paper but the process node. It is too far behind compared to Intel's 22nm parts which is getting cheaper fast. I actually bought a cheap laptop a few hours ago with an i5-5200u as I am so intrigued with the Broadwell chips.
You do know that this was in no way, shape or form a carrizo chip, right?
This was carrizo-
LThe "L" matters.
It's a totally different architecture from the carrizo.
If you look at the carrizo however you'll see that it actually performs quite well in a performance pr watt comparison.