Corei9
Tapped to succeed the Bloomfield (Core i7) at the top of Intel’s performance heap, the new
Core i9-branded part will launch with a raft of enhancements to make sure it fills those
shoes.
Gulftown’s membership in the 32nm Westmere family of architectures has allowed Intel to drop
temps, boost cache, raise clockspeeds and increase the cores– six, to be exact. With a dash of
HyperThreading and X58 compatibility, enthusiast desktops will be primed to chew through
twelve concurrent threads when the chip debuts in early 2010.
Immediate obsolescence is an age old problem in the computer industry, but it doesn't look
like the upcoming Core i9 "Gulftown" processor is going to do anything to solve it. Word is
from early benchmarks of the upcoming Intel processor is that it bests the current Core i7 at
the top of the heap with speed gains as large as 50% -- directly in line with its addition of
two cores on top of the Core i7's existing four. Of course, six 2.8GHz cores aren't quite as
exponentially helpful when applied to non-optimized tasks, but with most major modern software
development aimed at better utilizing multiple cores, the core overkill of Core i9 will likely
prove increasingly useful over time. At the start, however, Core i9's improvements will come
at a premium: 130W power consumption instead of 95W in Core i7, and of course a high-end only
price tag to match. Word is we'll be seeing these chips hit the market in early 2010, possibly
as soon as January.