Recently, Intel released a special Xeon 6377P, which belongs to the Raptor Lake 13th generation Core family, equipped with 12 cores, 36MB cache, turbo frequency up to 5.7GHz, and TDP of only 95W. Today, Intel has added two new products to its product library that belong to the 13th generation Core family. They are also part of the second generation Core series, called Core 7 230H and Core 5 205H.

Compared with the previous Core 7 240H and Core 5 210H, the only change between the two is that the core display is removed (ping) and eliminated (bi), so it must be equipped with an independent graphics card.
Core 7 230H 6P+4E 10 cores and 16 threads, L3 cache 24MB, maximum core frequency 5.2GHz.
Core 5 205H 4P+4E 8 cores and 12 threads, L3 cache 12MB, maximum core frequency 4.8GHz.
Both support dual-channel DDR5-5200, DDR4-3200, LPDDR5/5X-2500, and LPDDR4X-4267 memory, with a maximum capacity of 96GB, a basic power consumption of 45W, and an adjustable range of 35-115W.

Speaking of which, Intel has released two special products at this time. One is to deal with defective products that fail to meet the core requirements, and the other is to facilitate manufacturers to re-make DDR4 notebooks.
However, the second-generation Core 200H series is originally designed for low-end notebooks, and they must be equipped with independent graphics, which is expensive and goes against the original intention.
What's more, there is now a more advanced and equally low-end third-generation Core (Wildcat Lake).
So, I really don’t understand.

