![]() In the end, the company chose to keep the exact same core configuration as for the i9-11900K-8-core/16-thread. Here, the company hit the problem of how to carve out the Core i7 part. The company hence settled on 8-core/16-thread for even its top i9-11900K part, hoping that the claimed 19% IPC gain would see the chip through. With "Rocket Lake," and its new higher-IPC "Cypress Cove" CPU cores being built on existing 14 nm process, Intel can no longer cram more than eight of the larger cores plus an iGPU into the LGA1200 package. The i7-9700K was an 8-core/8-thread processor, while the i9-9900K was 8-core/16-thread, and the i7-10700K was an 8-core/16-thread part, while the i9-10900K was 10-core/20-thread. Intel had until now differentiated the Core i7 and Core i9 parts using core/thread counts. Intel introduced the Core i9 moniker to the mainstream-desktop segment to better tackle the AMD Ryzen 7 series. It was only weeks later we caught up with the brilliantly priced Core i5-11400F, and we are now looking at the Core i7-a brand that represented the top-end from Intel until as recently as the Core i7-8700K. When Intel debuted its 11th Gen Core "Rocket Lake" desktop processor lineup in March, much of the attention was grabbed by the Core i9-11900K and Core i5-11600K. We have with us the Core i7-11700KF processor. ![]()
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