"Gulftown" is the Flagship of 32nm "Westmere" Line

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Intel's aggressive drive to 32nm has many reconsidering their purchasing plans over the next year.

All Westmere chips will feature higher performance and lower power consumption. This is made possible through the use of fourth generation strained silicon and second generation high-k/metal gate technology, referring to the use of a High-k gate dielectric and a metal gate electrode.

Intel is reporting at least a 22 percent performance increase clock for clock over their 45nm process, and there are still many steppings to go before they go to market. Westmere also has seven new instructions, designed for accelerating encryption and decryption algorithms. All Nahalem and Westmere based processors will use DDR3 exclusively.

The first Westmere chips will be codenamed Clarkdale, featuring two 32nm logical processors paired with a graphics core and an integrated memory controller built on a 45nm line. By using "Multi-Chip Packaging", Intel will be able to minimize their losses from defective chips on a maturing manufacturing line. Arrandale is the mobile variant, with additional power saving technology for laptops.

Gulftown is the successor to the Nehalem-based Core i7 and is due in the middle of 2010. Gulftown has six cores, but is capable of efficiently handling twelve threads at once, thanks to its next generation Hyper-Threading. It will use the X58 chipset due to the LGA-1366 socket, but there are rumors of a newer version coming in 2010 that will feature support for USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s.

DailyTech has received information that Core i5 Lynnfield and Clarksfield CPUs will be replaced by quad core Westmere variants in the middle of 2010. Intel refuses to comment on unannounced products, although they did state that "additional 32nm products will follow in 2010".

Right now, Intel is focusing on ramping up production of Clarkdale and Arrandale for the fourth quarter of this year. Fab D1D, Intel's manufacturing research factory in Hilsboro, Oregon, is already outfitted with 32nm equipment and will begin commercial production in Q4. Fab D1C and AFO (Aloha Factory Operations), in Oregon as well, will also ramp up in the fourth quarter of this year.

Intel's "Megafab", Fab 32 in Chandler, Arizona, will start 32nm production in early 2010, followed by Fab 11X in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. Other fabs may follow to meet demand.

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DailyTech - "Gulftown" is the Flagship of 32nm "Westmere" Line

The good news is that this "Gulftown" chip will use LGA-1366 and will be compatible with X58 motherboard

It will have 6 cores\12 threads, and Intel says that will have lower power consumption and at least 22 percent performance increase clock for clock over the current i7
 
A 22% increase in clock for clock performance over i7 plus 6 cores is insane.

It looks like Intel is going to keep the performance crown for quite some time.
 
Eventualy the market will be so flooded that no one will have a need for more performance.... That or AMD can just make there chips even cheaper.
 
And how many years will it take before there will be any programs that will utilize six cores? Hardware has far outstripped software as far as CPUs go.
 
I still think Bulldozer sounds like a pornstar name.

I'm hoping to see some good come out of AMD in the next year, but this Gulftown is looking ridiculously fast.
 
I think youre forgetting that AMD is working on some stuff too, bulldozer.

Yeah but it won't be released until 2011 and will most likely still be 45nm (because of the increased difficulty of launching a new architecture and manufacturing process simultaneously) unless AMD does a 32nm die shrink of Deneb.

I can't comment on bulldozers performance one way or the other since next to no information has been released on it it yet but AMD has a long way to go to beat the current i7's, much less gulftown. Also Sandy Bridge is supposed to be released in '11 as well.
 
Yeah but it won't be released until 2011 and will most likely still be 45nm (because of the increased difficulty of launching a new architecture and manufacturing process simultaneously) unless AMD does a 32nm die shrink of Deneb.

I can't comment on bulldozers performance one way or the other since next to no information has been released on it it yet but AMD has a long way to go to beat the current i7's, much less gulftown. Also Sandy Bridge is supposed to be released in '11 as well.

I hope they at least get close.

I agree it took a while to get it right with 45nm.

But they were supposedly working on 32mn already, so i dunno.

And im pretty sure it would be a new socket as well.
 
ill have to save up some doe for this!

say Q4? or 2010? i can live with that. thats right around the time i get my yearly bonuses.
 
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