Cannon Lake (microprocessor)
Intel processor family / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cannon Lake is Intel's codename for the 8th generation of Core processors based on Palm Cove, a 10 nm die shrink of the Kaby Lake microarchitecture. As a die shrink, Palm Cove is a new process in Intel's process-architecture-optimization execution plan as the next step in semiconductor fabrication.[1] Cannon Lake CPUs are the first mainstream CPUs to include the AVX-512 instruction set.
This article is about the Intel microprocessor. For other uses, see Cannon Lake (disambiguation).
Quick Facts General information, Launched ...
General information | |
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Launched | May 15, 2018; 6 years ago (May 15, 2018) |
Discontinued | February 28, 2020; 4 years ago (February 28, 2020) |
Marketed by | Intel |
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Performance | |
Max. CPU clock rate | 3.2 GHz |
Architecture and classification | |
Technology node | Intel 10 nm (tri-gate) transistors |
Microarchitecture | Palm Cove |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
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GPU | Factory disabled |
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History | |
Predecessors | Mobile: Coffee Lake (2nd optimization) Kaby Lake Refresh (2nd optimization) |
Successor | Ice Lake (architecture) |
Support status | |
Legacy support for iGPU |
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Prior to Cannon Lake's launch, Intel launched another 14 nm process refinement with the codename Coffee Lake.[2]
The successor of Cannon Lake is Ice Lake, powered by the Sunny Cove microarchitecture, which represents the architecture phase in the process-architecture-optimization model.[3][4]