So, Intel moved next year's Cannonlake (the successor to the just announced Kaby Lake, which is basically renamed Skylake) to 14nm, due to failure in getting 10nm yields. That was supposed to be the "process" improvement generation of Intel's already terribly slow cycle, as it will still be the exact same core and the thing that was supposed to improve was just the process.
So since they know they won't be able to make it on the better process, they will still release the same cores, still call them Cannonlake and they came up with a name for the "new" process - "the new 2nd generation 14nm process", to call it an improvement.. So 2018 will be another year of "same stuff" from Intel, except even more.
They not only stopped their performance gains, prolonged their cycle to three steps last year, with any sort of architecture improvement coming in only once in three generations, but now they are also going to miss even those steps.
If the situation wasn't bad enough, I need to put in perspective that they are fucking up compared to what has been a terrible job in the first place. The tech forums are full of users of Sandy Bridge i7s - the processor that was developed in 2005, showcased in 2009 and hit the market in 2011 that.. there is no point to switch from because Intel's 2017 Kaby Lake is barely any faster, despite coming 6 years later, higher price, several chipsets (so you had to buy new motherboards twice since Sandy Bridge) and process improvements as well as moving to DDR4 Ram it is, well, mostly just more power efficient compared to the 2011 Sandy Bridge.
Meanwhile, the first AMD Zen is made on 14nm just like Intel, and hits the market in a month, while the architecture is already just so slightly better than Intel's best. Except AMD hired Samsung to move Zen to their 10nm process next year and 7nm in two years PLUS both generations are promised to come with significant architecture improvements, so by 2019 we would see a 3rd gen Zen architecture made on 7nm.
With current schedule at that time Intel would be hitting 10nm and making a ~3-5% performance increase compared to today's Kaby Lake. But since Zen is around the corner, Intel suddenly (and finally) started work on a new architecture, the successor to the "Core" architecture, that is to be finished by 2020, lol.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigerlake
It sucks when a company doesn't do shit for years and rakes the profits on the same shit until someone else comes with something better to push them to stop fucking around, and they don't even have a plan. That's a company that could be changing the world with their insane margins and all the profits after years of abusing their monopoly. Instead, they are only doing a thing when their monopoly is threatened, just to get back to their comfortable position. That was the case with the Core architecture, and that seems to be the case now with its now planned successor. I really hope they don't catch up to AMD this time around.
So since they know they won't be able to make it on the better process, they will still release the same cores, still call them Cannonlake and they came up with a name for the "new" process - "the new 2nd generation 14nm process", to call it an improvement.. So 2018 will be another year of "same stuff" from Intel, except even more.
They not only stopped their performance gains, prolonged their cycle to three steps last year, with any sort of architecture improvement coming in only once in three generations, but now they are also going to miss even those steps.
If the situation wasn't bad enough, I need to put in perspective that they are fucking up compared to what has been a terrible job in the first place. The tech forums are full of users of Sandy Bridge i7s - the processor that was developed in 2005, showcased in 2009 and hit the market in 2011 that.. there is no point to switch from because Intel's 2017 Kaby Lake is barely any faster, despite coming 6 years later, higher price, several chipsets (so you had to buy new motherboards twice since Sandy Bridge) and process improvements as well as moving to DDR4 Ram it is, well, mostly just more power efficient compared to the 2011 Sandy Bridge.
Meanwhile, the first AMD Zen is made on 14nm just like Intel, and hits the market in a month, while the architecture is already just so slightly better than Intel's best. Except AMD hired Samsung to move Zen to their 10nm process next year and 7nm in two years PLUS both generations are promised to come with significant architecture improvements, so by 2019 we would see a 3rd gen Zen architecture made on 7nm.
With current schedule at that time Intel would be hitting 10nm and making a ~3-5% performance increase compared to today's Kaby Lake. But since Zen is around the corner, Intel suddenly (and finally) started work on a new architecture, the successor to the "Core" architecture, that is to be finished by 2020, lol.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigerlake
It sucks when a company doesn't do shit for years and rakes the profits on the same shit until someone else comes with something better to push them to stop fucking around, and they don't even have a plan. That's a company that could be changing the world with their insane margins and all the profits after years of abusing their monopoly. Instead, they are only doing a thing when their monopoly is threatened, just to get back to their comfortable position. That was the case with the Core architecture, and that seems to be the case now with its now planned successor. I really hope they don't catch up to AMD this time around.
So if the architecture is more or less the same, just a different name, does that mean if someone were to buy a 2016 MBP, or any other Intel powered laptop, they won't have something that's much more powerful until 2018, or later?