Lakefield couldn't succeed with just 1 big core and subpar Tremont cores on the subpar 10nm from Icelake, with this low performance it never was appealing for OEMs and a broader mass of people no matter how good the battery life would have been. Maybe they learned from Lakefield which helped Meteor Lake though.
Tremont was very good. It was the Lakefield implementation that sucked. In fact it was so bad, that the Tremont-only Jasperlake beat the big Sunny Cove cores in single thread by 20-30%.
Intel Pentium Silver N6005 vs Intel Core i5-L16G7 - Benchmarks, Tests and Comparisons
www.notebookcheck.net
Since Jasper lake devices only cost $300-400, you'd ignore Lakefield completely. Faster single thread, way faster multi-thread and graphics and 1/3rds the cost.
If at least it had battery life greatly improved like the original Tablet Atoms, yea it would have had a niche. But Lakefield had no place anywhere. This is what I mean. Intel can talk all the want and flash PPT presentations in your face until you get a seizure. Well, how does it perform in reality?
Meteor Lake is mainly about power efficiency (and graphics+NPU), there are so many improvements targeted for improved efficiency and battery life, they say the soc power is cut in half compared to Raptor Lake. I don't think it will be revolutionary when it comes to battery life but AMD isn't either.
See that's the thing. Meteorlake has all the potential to have a revolutionary battery life on par with ARM platform. TDP barely matters when it comes to most battery life scenarios. Web browsing, watching Youtube, peak power just doesn't matter. The ability to go to ultra low idle as a platform(not just the SoC) and be able to keep it there most of the time in real world scenarios is what gets great battery life.
I believe Lunar Lake will be a different beast but this chip is optimized for ultra low power from the beginning and only features 4+4 cores, it won't scale up to 45W like Meteor Lake.
TDP don't matter and neither does 4+4 or 8+8 or n+a. That mattered 25 years ago, before advanced power management techniques such as on-die PM chips and power gating of unused blocks. Sure, if you are gaming or rendering but no one measures battery life doing that. If you really cared in those scenarios you'd just get a 7W Y-class chip.
Battery life in laptops mean web browsing, video playback, editing documents, etc. You could have a 65W chip, but you don't need extended peak performance. Here's where the current x86 platforms suck. It doesn't have to be, leading many ignorant to believe it has to do with the ISA.
I only believe Lunarlake will do better in this regard because the same insiders that said Meteorlake is a so-so chip isn't saying the same about Lunarlake. I haven't heard of any projections from these people, but they also say Lunarlake isn't plagued with execution issues, delays, and drama like Meteorlake went through.