Intel confirms radical 10nm Alder Lake CPU is go for later this year

Intel Alder Lake render
(Image credit: Intel)

Intel has confirmed production of its Alder Lake CPUs, based on a radical new hybrid architecture, will ramp up in the second half of this year. The confirmation came in the same earnings calls in which Intel’s new CEO Pat Gelsinger put his confidence in its upcoming 7nm production node.

However, the skinny on Alder Lake came from outgoing CEO Bob Swan. "As we look ahead, we are excited about the capabilities we are bringing to customers with Alder Lake for mobile and desktop PCs and Sapphire Rapids for the data center. These products take advantage of our Enhanced SuperFin process technology and numerous architectural improvements and both are broadly sampling to customers.

"We will qualify Alder Lake desktop and notebook for production and begin our volume ramp in the second half of 2021 and we expect production qualification of Sapphire Rapids at the end of 2021," Swan said.

Swans mention of 'Enhanced SuperFin process technology' refers to the latest revised version of Intel’s troubled 10nm production node. Originally slated for introduction in 2015, Intel’s 10nm process is at least five years late. 

Your next upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

Best CPU for gaming: the top chips from Intel and AMD
Best graphics card: your perfect pixel-pusher awaits
Best SSD for gaming: get into the game ahead of the rest

As things stand, Intel has yet to sell a 10nm processor for desktop or laptop PCs with more than four cores. Indeed, before those Alder Lake chips ramp later this year, Intel is due to release yet another 14nm generation of processors, known as Rocket Lake.

In that context, confirmation that Alder Lake remains on track for later this year is significant. As regular readers will know, Alder Lake won’t just be Intel’s first full range of 10nm processors, it’s set to introduce a radical new hybrid architecture.

Similar to the so-called big.LITTLE ARM-based chips found in smartphones and Apple’s new M1 processor, Alder Lake combines both larger, high performance CPU cores with smaller high efficiency cores, theoretically combining the best of both worlds in a single architecture.

While it’s a well established approach in smartphones, such a hybrid architecture would be novel in the context of mainstream PCs, and most especially desktop ones. The most significant doubt concerns operating system awareness regarding the Windows OS.

In short, the operating system needs to be aware of the topology of the chip in order to schedule software threads to the correct cores. Otherwise, critical threads would inevitably end up on the small cores at least some of the time, compromising performance. 

Even if the hardware is definitely on track for this year, Intel absolutely has to nail the software side before it can even think about releasing the chips out into the wild.

Jeremy Laird
Hardware writer

Jeremy has been writing about technology and PCs since the 90nm Netburst era (Google it!) and enjoys nothing more than a serious dissertation on the finer points of monitor input lag and overshoot followed by a forensic examination of advanced lithography. Or maybe he just likes machines that go “ping!” He also has a thing for tennis and cars.

Latest in Processors
A chip being held up in an Intel fab
Intel is reportedly 'working to finalize commitments from Nvidia' as a foundry partner, suggesting gaming potential for the 18A node
AMD Strix Point APU chip, held in a hand, with the reflected light showing the various processing blocks in the chip die
AMD's next-gen 'Gorgon Point' APU outted and seemingly sticks with RDNA 3.5 graphics which is disappointing for handheld gaming PCs if accurate
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivering pancakes and sausages to pre-GTC show hosts and guests, wearing an apron
'There might be a party. I wasn't invited,' says Jensen Huang of the rumoured TSMC proposal to join forces and run Intel's chip fabs
Nvidia Feynman GPU
While we despair of RTX 50-series supplies and wait on next-gen Rubin, Nvidia reveals its next-next GPU architecture will be known as Feynman and is due in 2028
Nvidia Vera CPU
Nvidia reveals Vera, a new CPU with 'custom' cores which could be very exciting for its upcoming premium PC processor
Machinery tools and equipment,Rolls of galvanized steel for production metal pipes and tubes for industrial ventilation systems in factory.
New super-thin '2D' metal sheets could enable ultra-low power chips and can you guess how they're made? Yup, by squishing stuff really hard
Latest in News
Crysis hero Prophet running down a beach while under fire
Crysis Remastered Trilogy activates maximum value mode as upgraded version of the legendary, hardware-crushing FPS series is currently 60% off
A goblin with sharp teeth, wearing goggles, lets out a mischievous cackle in WoW's latest patch: Undermine(d).
World of Warcraft's started swiping good ideas from one of its most popular user-made UI addons, and it's honestly about time
A female druidic figure clutches a heart riven with thorns in Hunt: Showdown
'We want to increase the cost of silence': Hunt: Showdown 1896's latest update brings a new event, a massive list of bugfixes and a tougher challenge for stealthy players
It's ENA! From the free adventure Dream BBQ!
Mindbending free multimedia adventure ENA: Dream BBQ is out now, has activated all my neurons and opened my third eye
PC Gamer magazine issue 408 Doom: The Dark Ages
PC Gamer magazine's new issue is on sale now: Doom: The Dark Ages
A gigantic terracotta sentinel made of living armor
Total War: Warhammer 3's army of Cathay has broken containment and is making its way to tabletop Warhammer at last