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Intel's CPU Shift: Back to Unified Design?
24 Feb
Summary
- Intel seeks engineer for unified core team, hinting at design change.
- Multi-architecture CPUs use performance and efficiency cores.
- A unified design shift could impact Intel CPUs post-2029.

Intel appears to be reconsidering its multi-architecture CPU strategy, with recent developments suggesting a potential return to a unified core design. The company is actively seeking a senior CPU verification engineer for its Unified Core team, a role that hints at a significant change in future processor development.
Since the introduction of its 12th Generation "Alder Lake" processors, Intel has utilized a combination of performance and efficiency cores. This approach, while showing promise in productivity tasks, has faced challenges in gaming performance. The complexity introduced by managing disparate core types and the specialized Thread Director may be prompting this strategic evaluation.
Rumors circulating mid-2025 indicated that Intel might revert to a single CPU architecture after its Nova Lake successor, codenamed Razer Lake. Such a transition would represent a substantial departure from recent and near-future designs. If Intel moves forward with a unified design, it could allow for more performance cores on a single chip, though this future architecture is not expected to launch before 2030.




