Wednesday, April 5th 2023
Intel Issues Discontinuation Notice for Many 11th Gen Core Processors
Not entirely unexpected, Intel has started to discontinue its 11th Gen Core processors, also known as Tiger Lake. In a product change notification (PCN) the company has listed no less than five mobile and four desktop parts that the company will stop letting its customers order from the end of June this year, with the last shipment taking place at the end of January 2024.
The discontinued range covers everything from Core i3 to Core i9 models and the full range of discontinued models can be found in the screenshot below. It should be noted that the desktop parts are the B SKU parts that were for example found in Intel's NUC 11 Extreme and are 65 W TDP parts. Most of the mobile parts are still available in products being sold, albeit, most of those products being older SKUs that have been replaced by 12th and 13th Gen Core processors by now. None of the products in the PCN were available directly to end consumers to purchase as far as TPU is aware.
Sources:
Intel (PDF), via Tom's Hardware
The discontinued range covers everything from Core i3 to Core i9 models and the full range of discontinued models can be found in the screenshot below. It should be noted that the desktop parts are the B SKU parts that were for example found in Intel's NUC 11 Extreme and are 65 W TDP parts. Most of the mobile parts are still available in products being sold, albeit, most of those products being older SKUs that have been replaced by 12th and 13th Gen Core processors by now. None of the products in the PCN were available directly to end consumers to purchase as far as TPU is aware.
11 Comments on Intel Issues Discontinuation Notice for Many 11th Gen Core Processors
edit: That's just for K parts, but they gradually discontinued other parts over the next couple years too. I'm not sure if there are any 10th-gen parts still in production.
Yep 11900k rocket one core by loosing 2 cores to do it
It was really a troll release to beat amd single core speed lol EOLakes :cool:
11th gen intel was a total disaster.
What if TSMC gets stuck on 3nm for a couple of years.
Would they be able to get zen 6 on 4nm?
In the time it took intel to go from skylake to "arch that will replace skylake eventually" AMD produced zen, zen+, zen 2, AND zen 3, and less then a month after rocket lake we got the 5800x3d.
Intel took FOREVER to respond to the zen threat, reminder that rocket lake was 3 years late to market and half baked when we got it. AMD has had no issue backporting zen to older designs so I dont think they'll have issues.
Works fine for me, zero blue screens since i installed it back in May 2021.
So the reports of the death of the 14nm node are greatly exaggerated. 14nm will live forever or at least die with a half-life.