• AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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    6 months ago

    The number behind Ultra is pretty much the same as with the i$x scheme. 3 is entry, 5 is mid range, 7 is high end, 9 is bad decision making.

    The number after that kind of works like before. So higher number means more better. Probably with an extension for coming generation. Remember, the first i5s had 4 digit names as well, the fourth digit was prepended to indicate generations.

    Thing is, there’s no really good naming scheme, because there are so many possible variants/dimensions. Base clock, turbo clock, TDP, P core count, E core count, PCIe lanes, socket, generation ,… How would you encode that in a readable name?

    • far_university1990@feddit.de
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      6 months ago

      just concat: intel i7 11g4p8e128l420c520b

      11 gen 4 pcore 8 ecore 128 lane 4.20ghz clock base 5.20ghz clock boost

      letter between for readable. maybe not add lane if not change for same number of pcore and ecore

      gskill do similar thing: F5-5200J3636C16GX2-FX5

      5200 mhz unbuffered dimm 36-36-36 timing 1.20v 16g per module dual channel 2 module in kit

      see here: https://www.gskill.com/faq/1502180912/DRAM-Memory

      edit: also can put architecture with letter to indicate refresh, add suffix for apu and maybe tdp

      can maybe use some letter for number: not that many different core number, make a=1pcore, b=2pcore, c=3pcore, … more than 26 pcore unlikely ever in consumer cpu. same for ecore maybe