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Core 200s (Bartlett Lake-S) Announced at CES 2025

fry

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Early this year, rumors abounded that Intel would release a fourth generation of LGA1700 CPUs. Intel Planning P-Core Only Bartlett LGA1700 Processors for 2025 (Techpowerup) Those CPUs seem to have been announced at CES 2025.

I'm still trying to work my way around what this means, but Intel has announced new (or repackaged) LGA1700 CPUs at CES 2025. The press briefing linked below claims that these CPUs were "Formerly codenamed Bartlett Lake S" (Link 1, Slide 2), and the second link appears to verify this. The processors look closer to Raptor Lake than Arrow Lake, at least.The processors will have hyper-threading (on P cores), and will be "Socket compatible with 12th, 13th, and 14th gen" (Link 2, Footnotes). The chips are mentioned to have E-cores, and although the rumored P-core only Bartlett Lake SKUs haven't been disproven, there is no evidence of their existence.

The chip mentioned in the second link, the Core 7 251E, seems to be an 8 P-core, 16 E-core chip, (P-core boost clocks up to 5.6GHz) in line with rumors that Bartlett Lake S would have an i7 class CPU with an 8p-16e configuration. I am unsure what this means for the previously expected 8-12 P-core chips.

I am also confused as to why I haven't been able to find a clear list of SKUs on Intel's site. Or why there I have been unable to find coverage of these new SKUs beyond a Wccftech article that lists out 22 different SKUs based on 8 different CPUs, and claims a January 13th release date.

I also cannot find an official release date for Core 200s processors on Intel's site, and Wccftech may be confusing Core 200s (Bartlett Lake S) with Core Ultra 200s (Arrow Lake S), as Intel's site does claim that "Intel Core Ultra 200S series 65-watt and 35-watt desktop processors and OEM systems will be available ... beginning Jan. 13, 2025." (Link 4)


Switching from observations to speculation, it is also worth noting that these chips will likely not be particularly accessible. Intel's -E type edge computing processors aren't typically available for consumer purchase. I also have a few theories as to why this launch has gone largely unnoticed, including that it has been obscured by GPU launches at CES 2025, Intel's naming scheme (Core 200s vs Core Ultra 200s), and the lack of recent leaks about (and therefore anticipation for) Bartlett Lake S.


Sourcing:
Edge CES Press Briefing (Intel) (Note slide 2 of this press briefing, which confirms the Core 200s CPUs as Bartlett Lake desktop CPUs)
Intel Core Processors (Series 2) (Intel) (Information published by Intel on the Core 200s CPUs, and the Core 7 251E)
Intel Unveils Arrow Lake-S “non-K” Desktop CPUs; Bartlett Lake-S CPU Lineup Intended For Edge Applications (Wccftech) (Only published article found on Bartlett Lake S's release)
2025 CES Client Computing News (Intel)
 
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Intel's whole lineup is so hella confusing that I wonder how confusing it is to typical consumers.

There were already totally different-gen laptop SKUs existing with similar naming as their desktop "counterparts" and now this?
 
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Still labeled as an Edge product... but sincerely hope they release it on LGA 1700, hopefully with CUDIMM support on high end Z790 motherboards
 
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Intel's whole lineup is so hella confusing that I wonder how confusing it is to typical consumers.
Exactly what I'm thinking. I was really excited about Bartlett Lake when I read about it in the news, but even if it was released, I would never know because there's just way too much stuff among Intel's products and roadmaps. The whole Intel lineup is just a convoluted mess of random numbers now.
 

fry

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I've found three definite CPUs so far. It seems that the current Bartlett Lake lineup includes:

Core 7 251E; 8 p-cores @ 5.6/2.1ghz; 16 e-cores @ 4.4/1.6ghz; 32 igpu eus; 65w
Core 5 211E; 6 p-cores @ 4.9/2.7ghz; 4 e-cores @ 3.7/2.0ghz; 24 igpu eus; 65w
Core 3 201E; 4 p-core 4.8/3.6; 24 igpu eus; 60w

None of these are available as individual units to my knowledge, but OEMs are selling package deals.

 
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I've found three definite CPUs so far. It seems that the current Bartlett Lake lineup includes:

Core 7 251E; 8 p-cores @ 5.6/2.1ghz; 16 e-cores @ 4.4/1.6ghz; 32 igpu eus; 65w
Core 5 211E; 6 p-cores @ 4.9/2.7ghz; 4 e-cores @ 3.7/2.0ghz; 24 igpu eus; 65w
Core 3 201E; 4 p-core 4.8/3.6; 24 igpu eus; 60w

None of these are available as individual units to my knowledge, but OEMs are selling package deals.

So rumours of a pure p-core only version are false? Oh man, what a bummer! :(
 
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So rumours of a pure p-core only version are false? Oh man, what a bummer! :(

IIRC, it was supposed to be split in 2 types, a rebrand of Raptor Lake-S available at the Core 7 level and below, in addition to a Core 5 8 P-core, Core 7 10 P-core and Core 9 12 P-core model. I suppose there is still a way to go but this is telling me Intel does not intend to sell this chip to consumer channel regardless...
 
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IIRC, it was supposed to be split in 2 types, a rebrand of Raptor Lake-S available at the Core 7 level and below, in addition to a Core 5 8 P-core, Core 7 10 P-core and Core 9 12 P-core model. I suppose there is still a way to go but this is telling me Intel does not intend to sell this chip to consumer channel regardless...
That would be a shame. It's the first Intel CPU I got excited about since Comet/Rocket Lake. :(
 
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That would be a shame. It's the first Intel CPU I got excited about since Comet/Rocket Lake. :(
But why? I think Intel's innovation (if you wanna call it that) are ecores, if someone wants a pure pcore chip, amd has them. Sure it wouldn't be bad if both vendors had the option, but being excited over it? Oh well.
 
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But why? I think Intel's innovation (if you wanna call it that) are ecores, if someone wants a pure pcore chip, amd has them. Sure it wouldn't be bad if both vendors had the option, but being excited over it? Oh well.
I'm not a fan of software scheduling, especially if it needs / works better on Windows 11. I'm not a fan of Windows 11.

Also, e-cores aren't really power-efficient, only die area-efficient, so it doesn't matter to me that a CPU has 24-32 cores if it consumes 300+ W on full blast. I'd rather have 8-12 bigger and more powerful cores that consume less.

This is why I'm on AMD now (and that's why I don't like AMD's dual CCD X3D chips, either), but I'm not averse to going back to Intel in the future if they offer something that suits me. It looks like that's not their intention, after all.
 
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I'm not a fan of software scheduling, especially if it needs / works better on Windows 11. I'm not a fan of Windows 11.

Also, e-cores aren't really power-efficient, only die area-efficient, so it doesn't matter to me that a CPU has 24-32 cores if it consumes 300+ W on full blast. I'd rather have 8-12 bigger and more powerful cores that consume less.

This is why I'm on AMD now (and that's why I don't like AMD's dual CCD X3D chips, either), but I'm not averse to going back to Intel in the future if they offer something that suits me. It looks like that's not their intention, after all.
Ecores are complicated. Yes they are not more power efficient 1:1, but the 1:1 comparison is also flawed. Since you can fit ~4 of them into the same space, they are in fact more efficient. A CPU consuming 300-400-500-500000 watts is a choice. A choice of the manafacturer of said CPU, and the end user who has the option to limit it to whatever power they want. Like sure the 9800x 3d is leaping to 160w but you know, I just limited that thing and it's fine.
 
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Ecores are complicated. Yes they are not more power efficient 1:1, but the 1:1 comparison is also flawed. Since you can fit ~4 of them into the same space, they are in fact more efficient. A CPU consuming 300-400-500-500000 watts is a choice. A choice of the manafacturer of said CPU, and the end user who has the option to limit it to whatever power they want. Like sure the 9800x 3d is leaping to 160w but you know, I just limited that thing and it's fine.
Sure, you can limit it, that is not my main problem anyway, just a minor thing. My main problem is that it's either Windows 11 with Thread Director, or you get less performance and maybe some scheduling issues as well (tasks being sent to the wrong core type).

Speaking of the 9800X3D, I wasn't really happy with AMD's choice to let it consume twice as much as the 7800X3D does, although placing the cores on top of the cache helps with heat dissipation a bit (I only care about power because of its relation to heat).
 
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Sure, you can limit it, that is not my main problem anyway, just a minor thing. My main problem is that it's either Windows 11 with Thread Director, or you get less performance and maybe some scheduling issues as well (tasks being sent to the wrong core type).

Speaking of the 9800X3D, I wasn't really happy with AMD's choice to let it consume twice as much as the 7800X3D does, although placing the cores on top of the cache helps with heat dissipation a bit (I only care about power because of its relation to heat).
It's really not bad. Don't know about amds scheduling issues, but I assume it's not bad there either. Realistically with any of these CPUs, you'll be gpu bottlenecked even with a 4090 regardless of what the scheduler decides to do.

Been doing a lot of testing thanks to capframe x which allows to change the scheduling with literally the press of a button, the last year the only game that didn't work properly out of the box was that Warhammer multiplayer game, which was a lot slower when it was allowed access to all cores.
 
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It's really not bad. Don't know about amds scheduling issues, but I assume it's not bad there either. Realistically with any of these CPUs, you'll be gpu bottlenecked even with a 4090 regardless of what the scheduler decides to do.
That's a good point. Still, I'd rather keep it simple with my PC if I can. No software scheduler, no third-party GPU tuning program, no RGB controller, my fan curve is strictly in the BIOS, and so on. Even for games, I only have Steam and Heroic Launcher installed which is more than enough. If Steam could manage all my non-Steam games as well, I'd do that.

Have I mentioned that I love the concept of plug-and-play? :) (I know, I'm not your typical PC enthusiast)
 
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Still labeled as an Edge product... but sincerely hope they release it on LGA 1700, hopefully with CUDIMM support on high end Z790 motherboards
I don't think they will add support for CUDIMMs on LGA1700, but indeed it would be nice and very interesting.
 
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