Late last week Intel announced its first workstation-grade Xeon CPUs for laptops. The exact details aren't available, nor is a release date, although the details it did release are intriguing.
Xeons have been available for high-end desktops doing work like CAD and other graphic design because they have features a business power user would want, like error correcting code (ECC) memory and the vPro business management features.
The laptop processor, the Xeon E3-1500M v5, is meant for that same market of power users who are on the go or move between locations and need mobility. And while the new Skylake processor will have some advanced features like ECC, there are some other goodies.
The Xeon E3-1500M v5 will include Thunderbolt 3 and USB Type-C ports, which support 10Gbps USB 3.1 Gen 2 transfer speeds. It will also have its own optimized graphics, although Intel did not go into details. The Xeon has never been known as a graphics champ since it runs on servers, but the upcoming Skylake line is said to have very good graphics, so we may see a desktop Xeon with Skylake-level graphics.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 13 2015, @08:36PM
The 386SX was a 16 bit bus version of the 386DX (Which unlike the 486DX but like all pre-486 Intel chips didn't have an onboard FPU) intended for use with 'cheaper' chipsets (And possibly compatibility with 286 chipsets, although that may be incorrect.)
The SL was interestingly enough the first intel chip with the SMM which lead to the PPro+ writemsr issue.