As always, I'm a bit skeptical about leaked clock speeds for a simple reason; they
never know the final clock speeds until they got the final stepping in a significant volume, which leads to the following logical deductions;
a) The CPUs are ready for "imminent" release (within the next couple of months)
or
b) This is yet another fake leak
Please keep this in mind.
Hmmm....So let me get this straight no more Hyper Threading U9 will have "only" 8 performance cores but 16 efficient cores there are rumors around the net that we could expect better improvements in IPC from 5% to 15% with P-cores 'tho some people claim it will be much better improvements when it comes to the E-cores then again U9 285 have in total 24 Threads compared to the I9 14900k that have 32 Threads....hmmm is it going to be better in multithreads apps at all???
You are raising excellent questions, which no one can answer until we get a deep-dive into actual finalized products, but I can still point out a few important aspects most people miss;
Firstly, given Arrow Lake is presumably a very different microarchitecture, we don't know its performance characteristics at all, and even if we got confirmed IPC figures, base clocks and boost clocks, amount of cache etc., it only gives us an idea of the overall performance, but still very little whether this is an all-round excellent performer, or only excels in computationally heavy (but logically simple) SIMD, or very good at mixed loads but not at heavy SIMD. It may very well end up like a stellar performer in synthetic or very specific benchmarks, and just being a modest upgrade in real world tasks, only time will tell. When it comes to E-cores, those are already mostly a gimmick. They serve two purposes; make the specs look nice, like having >5 GHz 20 cores at 65W (the big PC vendors loves this), and to make certain benchmarks like Cinebench look good (which have little or no relevance for end-users).
We also need to keep in mind when they do (presumably) larger architectural overhauls there might actually be areas with significant downsides too, especially with the "first iteration", so be mentally prepared for that, and don't completely dismiss large advancements in some areas if there are some regressions too. Additionally, despite IPC and rated clock speeds, the microarchitecture
and the node ultimately decides which performance will be achieved in specific workloads. Contrary to popular belief, IPC is actually an average amount of instructions, not performance at all. Plus, the node and the microarchitecture might allow the CPU to run a specific workload at a higher than expected sustained real clock speed than a competitor with similar or even higher "IPC". This was the case back with Zen 2 vs. Coffee Lake/Comet Lake, where in many multithreaded workloads Zen 2 achieved much higher actual clock speeds, while the Skylake-family throttled heavily despite higher IPC, resulting in lower performance for Intel. And IPC estimates based on rated clock speeds is useless, as rated clock speeds on current CPUs is mostly a gimmick anyways. This is why I always say; performance is what ultimately matters, how it's achieved is just details for those interested.
Two different diagrams of the LionCove core from LunarLake graphics:
Lots of good info there. Just keep in mind that any graphics used in promotional material prior to release may very well be based on approximations, not the final design.