10 things you need to know about Intel's new 6th-gen Skylake CPU

05.08.2015
Skylake is here, and with it, the expectation of faster performance and other innovations, from memory to connectivity. Here's your highlight reel of what's coming with the new chips. 

10. You'll need a new motherboard

Skylake CPUs use a new LGA1151 socket that is, of course, incompatible with LGA1150 motherboards used for Haswell and Broadwell. "Why oh why" you scream The need for DDR4, as well as a very different power delivery design for Skylake, pretty much mandated it.

9. Your old cooler will work

If you have a big investment in a liquid cooler or honking-big air coolers, they'll still work. Intel used the same dimensions for the cooler as the LGA1150. This, by the way, hasn't changed since at least the LGA1156 days.

8. The chip caters to overclockers

Intel officials said overclocker's concerns were very important to them for this CPU. Several key changes were made that add finer granularity for overclocking over previous chips, and the parts themselves are fully unlocked. Early reports say the chips will hit in the 6GHz range on liquid nitrogen, with reports of 5GHz on air "possible."

7. The new chipset is worth the upgrade itself

If you like to put a lot of hardware in your PC, Intel's new Z170 is a huge improvement over the rather bandwidth-limited Haswell-Z97 platform. Thanks to internal design changes and up to 20 PCIe gen-3  lanes, you won't have to cut bandwidth to the GPU just to run an M.2 at higher speed.

6. You'll need new memory, too

Skylake brings DDR4 memory to mainstream platforms at last. First introduced with the high-end Haswell-E platform in 2014, Skylake's support for DDR4 RAM means DDR3 is now officially on the way out.

5. It does actually work with DDR3, just not what you have

Interestingly, Intel did include support for DDR3 in the new memory controller integrated into Skylake CPUs, but it's not standard-voltage DDR3. Instead it's DDR3L, a lower-voltage variant of DDR3 that's not very common on desktop systems. Most motherboard vendors we spoke with said, DDR3L on a desktop board is unlikely outside of special use cases. Even if you could find a DDR3L Skylake board, your RAM probably would not work with it.

4. There are only two Skylake models for now

Showing just how increasingly important gamers are to Intel, the company said it's launching Skylake first to gamers and well ahead of mainstream and mobile users. There are two quad-core chips right now: The 4GHz Core i7-6700K and the 3.5GHz, Core i5-6600K. The Core i7 is $350, while the Core i5 is $243.

3. Skylake's faster

Intel's internal comparisons put the top-end Skylake CPU about 10 percent faster than the Core i7-4790K, 20 percent faster than the Core i7-4770K and an astounding 30 percent faster than a Core i7-3770K chip. Few will upgrade from 4th generation Haswell CPUs they bought last year, but much older 3rd-gen Ivy Bridge CPUs are looking worried.

2. Mobile parts come later

You should think of these two chips as a preview of what's to come for Skylake. Officially, Intel says a mobile Skylake CPU is due anytime in the quarter. It'll probably be in time for the shopping season, is our guess.

1. Still many open questions about Skylake

How many transistors does it have What does it actually look like on the inside We oddly don't know, even though reviewers have tested the chip. Intel is saving that news for the Intel Developer Forum later this month.

(www.pcworld.com)

Gordon Mah Ung

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