Effectively, Intel is still using Nehalem.
Effectively, Intel is still using P6, in a way…
All they did was made some teeny tiny IPC improvements, increased clock speeds and core counts, updated the memory and PCI-E controllers and added new instructions (usable only in very specific applications).
What about the following "tiny" changes;
- A massive overhaul of the vector engine
- One additional execution port
- Significantly larger OoO window, better branch prediction and uop cache.
- Significantly higher int MUL/DIV performance (Sunny Cove)
- Significantly higher memory address calculation (Sunny Cove)
I certanily think Intel could have brought more, but there have been major changes since Nehalem. Sandy Bridge and Ice Lake(Sunny Cove) are the biggest improvements relatively speaking.
They have not even touched the cache subsystem at all (just increased L3 size for higher core counts). They are finally doing that with Rocket Lake, but it is still just an increase in L1 and L2 sizes.
Both Skylake-X and Ice Lake featured major cache overhauls.
Right now they are stuck not only on the same architecture, but also the same manufacturing process, which is why there has been zero progress made since 2015 Skylake.
Nearly all of Intel's current problems are tied to their manufacturing problems. Ice Lake has been ready for years, and Sapphire Rapids is complete with just the final touches left. Both of these are good architectural improvements, and we could have gotten them two years earlier if their 10nm project hadn't derailed this badly.
Hopefully all these personnel changes will help. They really need some big changes. Thank God for AMD, they finally made Intel wake up.
Their manufacturing department and the corresponding management must wake up.
Their architectural department is not the problem.
Honestly I doubt this personnel change is going to change anything, and if it does, it will take at least five years before we see the results. This is probably just about finding a good person to lead until they find a successor, don't read too much into these things. Good engineering makes good products, not "rockstars".