As we all know, Intel processors used to be the Core i series, which continued until the 14th generation and were always called "xth generation Core". Then they were changed to the Core Ultra series, which has now developed to the third generation. However, in addition to the Core Ultra series, Intel has launched a new Core series. There is no i or Ultra, just called Core. There have been two generations.

Intel’s latest announcement is that the third generation Core processor will be launched soon!

Unfortunately there aren't any specific details,Judging from the first two generations, it should still be positioned in the low-end mobile market, creating cheap notebooks, mini machines, etc., and giving mid-to-low-end users another choice when the entire PC market is skyrocketing.

After all, the price of memory and hard drives is rising right now, and it won’t stop for a while. The Panther Lake generation notebooks are bound to be much more expensive, costing three to four thousand yuan more than before for basic operation.

However, it is speculated that the third-generation Core will not be based on the latest Panther Lake, but is more likely to be the previous-generation Arrow Lake, or even based on the first-generation Core Ultra Meteor Lake.

In fact, the current first- and second-generation Core series are essentially derived from the Raptor Lake 14th-generation Core. They only have mobile versions and low specifications.

Among them, the first generation are all U series, with a basic power consumption of 15W and a turbo frequency power consumption of 55W.

Specifically includeThe 10-core Core 7 150U, the Core 5 120U, and the 6-core Core 3 100U.

The second generation has more models and is divided into two sub-series: H and U.

H series includes14-core Core 9 270H, Core 7 250H, 12-core Core 5 220H, 8-core Core 5 210H, the base power consumption is 45W, and the turbo frequency power consumption is 115W.

U series includes10-core Core 7 250U, Core 5 220U, the basic power consumption is 15W, and the turbo frequency power consumption is 55W.