Intel will recover 8th-gen Coffee Lake chips this year—still during 14nm

Intel’s eighth-generation Core CPUs, codenamed Coffee Lake, will launch in a second half of 2017—far progressing than a 2018 launch duration suggested by ostensible product roadmaps leaked final year.

At a Investor Day eventuality final week, Intel reliable that a 8th-gen chips will once again be formed on a 14nm process, most like Broadwell, Skylake, and Kaby Lake before it. The initial Broadwell chips were expelled approach behind in 2014.

Intel officially abandoned a prior “Tick-Tock” strategy—with any “tick” representing a die cringe and any “tock” representing a new microarchitecture—in early 2016, and instead betrothed a three-phase indication of Process, Architecture, Optimization. But now, with Coffee Lake, it seems Intel competence have deserted that new model, too. Technically, Kaby Lake is a “Optimization” to a “Architecture” of Skylake and a “Process” of Broadwell, that creates a early launch of Coffee Lake on 14nm something of an anomaly.