Intel has formally launched its Ivy Bridge processor to the market according to numerous online reports. Ivy Bridge is the first device to officially come out on the company's 22-nm manufacturing process technology which includes FinFETs which are transistors built into a vertical fin of silicon.
UBM has already done an engineering examination of the Ivy Bridge processor in advance of the formal launch (see link below).
The launch covers quad-core devices aimed at desktop computers with dual-core devices for ultrabooks – Intel's term for thin notebooks – due to be announced later in the spring, the reports said.
The move from 32-nm Sandy Bridge processor to 22-nm Ivy Bridge should provide 20 percent more performance at 20 percent less average power according to one estimate.
The chip includes a graphics processor unit and DirectX11 support. DirectX is a collection of application programming interfaces (APIs) for handling multimedia tasks specified by Microsoft Corp.
Related links and articles:
Intel says 25% of shipments will be on 22-nm in Q2
Analysts start Intel Ivy Bridge CPU teardown
Intel gives deeper look into Ivy Bridge
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