Intel’s mobile processor product line, codenamed Wildcat Lake, is ushering in new progress.Recently, the Intel Core 5 330 appeared in the PassMark benchmark database for the first time, and its core specifications are basically the same as the previously exposed Core 5 320.In terms of hardware specifications,The Core 5 330 is composed of 2 performance cores and 4 energy efficiency cores, with a total of 6 cores and 6 threads. The frequency of the P core is 1.5/4.6GHz and the frequency of the LP-E core is 1.4/3.4GHz. The integrated graphics card part has not been changed, and is still equipped with 2 Xe3 cores, with a maximum operating frequency of 2.50GHz.

The Core 5 330 has a single-thread score of 4215 points and a multi-thread score of 14947 points. Compared with the Core 5 320 of the same series, the single-core performance of the Core 5 330 leads by about 4%; in terms of multi-threaded performance, the chip lags behind by less than 1%.Given that it is still early in testing and the sample size is extremely small, these data may change as more samples are collected.

The core upgrade focus of the Core 5 330 is mainly reflected in the commercial features.The chip has added support for Intel's SIPP (Stable IT Platform Program), which indicates that it is not intended for the mainstream consumer retail market, but is mainly supplied to commercial office and enterprise-level purchasing customers.

Previously, the Core 5 320 under Intel's Wildcat Lake architecture has been compared with Apple in multi-threaded performance measurements: its multi-core performance is 27% higher than the A18 Pro chip equipped in Apple's MacBook Neo, and its single-core performance is basically the same.