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These are mainstream chips with integrated graphics.
Compared to the previous generation, the CPU cores increase from 8 to 12, and the graphics cores from 12 to 16.
Eight of the twelve CPU cores are the smaller, slower, Zen 5c, so the 12 core model is probably equivalent to a 10 core Zen 5 CPU - or as fast as a 12 core Zen 4.
The model I'm really waiting for is Strix Point Halo, with more than 16 CPU cores - we don't know exactly how many - and 40 graphics cores. That hasn't been announced yet.
Lunar Lake is due out by September, aimed at mainstream laptops. Intel says that the new Performance cores offer 16% better IPC than the previous generation - exactly the same increase as AMD claims for Zen 5.
Intel also claims that the Efficiency cores can provide 70% better single-threaded performance and 3x better multi-threaded performance than the previous E-cores in Meteor Lake.
If that's accurate, it's a huge improvement, taking the E-cores (which were adequate but not good) to a level where they are directly comparable to Zen 5c.
Lunar Lake will be followed up by Arrow Lake before the end of the year, by while Arrow Lake will have the new Performance cores, it might still have the older, slower Efficiency cores.
So go for Lunar Lake? Not so fast. Lunar Lake will only be available with memory soldered directly onto the CPU, a maximum of 32GB.