Tuesday, March 26th 2024

Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Powered by Lunar Lake Surfaces on SANDRA Database

Samsung's next-generation Galaxy Book 5 Pro premium thin-and-light notebook is expected to incorporate Intel's upcoming Core Ultra "Lunar Lake" processor, and Arc Xe2 graphics, which "Lunar Lake" implements with its iGPU solution. Intel is expected to debut both "Lunar Lake" and "Battlemage" toward the end of 2024. A prototype of this Samsung notebook is already up and running, probably using engineering samples of the two chips. It came to light as keen-eyed enthusiasts noticed new benchmark entries on the SiSoft SANDRA online database. Here, the processor is shown featuring an 8-core (4P+4E) configuration, while the iGPU features a 4 Xe2 core configuration, which works out to 512 unified shaders. The P-cores of the CPU tick at 2.80 GHz, the E-cores at 1.65 GHz, and the iGPU at 1.85 GHz.
Sources: momomo_us (Twitter), VideoCardz
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6 Comments on Samsung Galaxy Book 5 Powered by Lunar Lake Surfaces on SANDRA Database

#1
dir_d
This Apple clone type laptop is always an intel solution. I would like to see an AMD one as well.
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#2
Noyand
Intel 18A is not vaporware then ?
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#3
watzupken
This chip will need to contend with the Snapdragon X Elite chip and AMD's Strix Point later this year. Competition in this space is going to be very hot.
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#4
Minus Infinity
NoyandIntel 18A is not vaporware then ?
It's not in Lunar Lake, that's using TSMC N3B. Probably have to wait for Panther Lake, Mediocre Lake's 2025 successor.
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#5
dir_d
watzupkenThis chip will need to contend with the Snapdragon X Elite chip and AMD's Strix Point later this year. Competition in this space is going to be very hot.
Hopefully a price war, they are all close to each other in performance.
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#6
persondb
Minus InfinityIt's not in Lunar Lake, that's using TSMC N3B. Probably have to wait for Panther Lake, Mediocre Lake's 2025 successor.
Lunar Lake has two chiplets/tiles, the Compute one(i.e. CPU cores), which is N3B and the SoC tile, that is supposed to be in Intel 18A.

Now if it really is in 18A or not, I have no idea.
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Dec 26th, 2024 20:03 EST change timezone

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