Comet Lake-U Generation Core i5-10210U First Tests: Slightly Faster than Current Chips

The next 5th generation Intel Core i10210-14U mobile processor has been featured in Geekbench and GFXBench benchmark databases. This chip belongs to the Comet Lake-U family, although one of the tests attributed it to the current Whiskey Lake-U. The novelty will be produced on the good old XNUMX-nm process technology, perhaps with some regular improvements.

Comet Lake-U Generation Core i5-10210U First Tests: Slightly Faster than Current Chips

The Core i5-10210U processor has four cores and eight threads and fits into the traditional 15W TDP for U-series chips. According to the Geekbench test, the processor clock speed was 2,2 GHz, although according to unofficial data, its base frequency will be 1,6 GHz, and in Turbo mode it will be able to overclock up to 4,2 GHz. By comparison, the current Whiskey Lake-U family of Core i5 models have the same base frequency of 1,6 GHz, and in Turbo mode it can reach 4,1 GHz. Actually, Comet Lake-U will not have many differences from the current models of Intel mobile chips.

Comet Lake-U Generation Core i5-10210U First Tests: Slightly Faster than Current Chips

As for the test results, there is also nothing outstanding. The Geekbench benchmark rated the Core i5-10210U single core performance at 3944 points, while the multi-core performance was rated at 12 points. A comparable single-core test result is typical of the Ryzen 743 5G APU, while all-core performance is comparable to the Core i2400-7U of the Kaby Lake Refresh generation.

Comet Lake-U Generation Core i5-10210U First Tests: Slightly Faster than Current Chips
Comet Lake-U Generation Core i5-10210U First Tests: Slightly Faster than Current Chips

As for GFXBench 5.0, here the Core i5-10210U also did not show anything outstanding. The integrated graphics of this processor turned out to be only slightly more productive than the “embedded” Intel UHD Graphics 620 in the Whiskey Lake generation Core i5-8265U processor, and in some tests the novelty turned out to be even weaker. Actually, there is nothing surprising here, because Comet Lake processors will receive the same 9th generation (Gen9) integrated graphics.



Source: 3dnews.ru

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