Intel to make a decent processor, instead of dealing with nonsense.
I wouldn't call it a nonsense. If it's engineered well and actually works, it could very well replace ATX PSUs and we could gains some extra efficiency. And Intel chips are decent, just not the best performing ones. Comet Lake was still fine and delivered a lot of value with locked chips (10400F and 10700F). Rocket Lake is just a sorry disaster, but either way it was planned and everybody knew that it would be a stop gap until Alder Lake. Alder Lake is expected to be a major release:
It will get new socket, likely DDR5, new architecture, likely node shrink and maybe big.LITTLE rip off technology. Once you look at everything, Intel will likely push power efficiency as a major feature. A new PSU standard (if it does what it claims to do) would be a nice addition. If Alder Lake doesn't suck and they put big and little cores on same chip, it can truly redefine desktops as we know. If it fails, then we will have some sort of bullshit like AMD FX with loads of Windows scheduler problems that weren't completely patched out until next major Windows release. I personally would like to see 8 big cores, 16 small cores and those 8 big cores hyperthreaded. If they can make it on new process node and not without some big sacrifices and at decent clock speed and turbo speed and still within reasonable TDP (let's say PL1 - 80 watts and PL2 - 150 watts, Tau 58 seconds), then it would be really interesting release. If they still can't get anything smaller than 14nm, then it will be yet another backported abortion. But if they can, that's going to be good. Meanwhile, AMD will be stuck with all even cores, but high core count. Alder Lake could be very interesting for multithreaded loads, but I wouldn't expect it to be much better at single threaded loads.
I see no reason to be so grim about them. They are very well aware that Rocket Lake is a stop gap and they are trying to remain respectable brands and reduce losses until they have something good. Creating a new architecture takes time and some planning for future. Rocket Lake likely was already engineered and functional some years prior.