Intel unveils Lunar Lake mobile processors at the third Intel Tech Tour in Taipei


Michelle Johnston Holthaus unveils the Lunar Lake SoC on stage at the third Intel Tech Tour. (Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)

What you need to know

  • Executive team members unveiled specifics of Intel Lunar Lake mobile processors while hosting the company’s third Intel Tech Tour in Taipei, Taiwan.
  • Across-the-board performance per watt improvements were demonstrated with in-house benchmark results and live demonstrations compared to previous-generation Meteor Lake devices.
  • Intel stresses that an AI advantage is not only related to Microsoft’s Copilot+ and that anyone who bought a Meteor Lake PC is considered “future-proof,” with further retorts to Microsoft’s implied priority on Snapdragon X and ARM.

The most exciting technology shift in years is happening, and the laptop category is about to look dramatically different, thanks to Intel and its rivals. It stands alongside its major PC manufacturing competitors, gearing up to show off the latest innovations in raw computing power in its Lunar Lake chips, paired with genuinely revolutionary advancements in power efficiency made possible with locally processed AI in neural processing units (NPUs.)

Intel invited me to Taipei, Taiwan, to visit its most extensive Intel Tech Tour to date. Along with 280 other members of the press and partners, I heard from Executive Vice President and General Manager of Intel’s Client Computing Group Michelle Johnston Holthaus and her peers as they laid bare the roadmap for the Lunar Lake system-on-chip (SoC) and the target to “win in performance, graphics, and AI.” Comparisons to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X platform and AMD’s next-gen plans are inevitable, so let’s briefly dig into what I found, with deep dives to come later this week.

Intel funded travel and expenses to Taipei, Taiwan, and provided confidential information under an embargo agreement. The company did not see the contents of this article before publishing.

Lunar Lake (almost) entirely unveiled

Rob Bruckner summarizes Intel’s roadmap for Lunar Lake. (Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)

Intel provided a host of talks explaining how Lunar Lake has improved over its predecessor, Meteor Lake, which was responsible for the first batch of Intel Core Ultra mobile chips. Hailed as a “transition to the AI PC,” Intel was keen to describe Meteor Lake as having brought users a “radical new experience” with its dedicated NPU running at a peak of 11.5 TOPS. It’s the metric you’ll continue to see for the foreseeable future, as targeting the highest tera operations per second while maintaining power efficiency is the new performance crown for PC brands to fight for.

At Intel, we’re dedicated to (bringing) as much compute capability into the PC (as possible) while also maintaining that wonderful long battery life and quiet performance.

Rob Bruckner, Intel Corporate VP and CTO

Lunar Lake bumps up its NPU-specific score to an impressive 48 peak TOPS. This is beyond the requirement for running Microsoft’s Copilot+ locally, and becomes part of the equation that provides the 120 total platform TOPS (PTOPS) when harnessing another 67 TOPS from the GPU with the rest provided by the rest of the compute tile. It’s all about the intended use of AI computing, with batches of burst processing better suited to a new and improved Xe2 GPU while the next-gen NPU 4 handles tasks requiring faster acceleration while still offering double the efficiency compared to Meteor Lake.

Darren Crews highlights the performance advancements of the new NPU 4 in Lunar Lake. (Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)

The primary benefit of accepting an invitation to Intel’s Tech Tour is seeing the fruits of Lunar Lake’s upgrades in real-time. Senior Principal Engineer and NPU Lead Architect Darren Crews showed me live demonstrations of generative AI harnessing Stable Diffusion to create images in a rapid 5 seconds, with Meteor Lake coming up behind at what now seems a meager 22 seconds. It came with plenty of deep-dive explanations that I’ll get into later this week, but seeing these results happen right in front of my eyes feels like enough proof to believe that Intel is ready to fight and retain its crown as the processing king of the hill.

However, performance improvements are only half of the puzzle. Intel is committed to maintaining a solid grip on power efficiency with its upcoming wave of Lunar Lake-powered devices from OEM partners. Another live demo showed a live-streamed 4K 24 FPS YouTube video running side-by-side on a Lunar Lake reference laptop and a comparable Meteor Lake model from Lenovo, with the former pulling consistently lower wattage. When quizzed about the potential for scaling its hardware for ever-higher TOPS scores, Intel clarified that it selected and refined everything for a perfect balance of performance-per-watt.

A side-by-side demonstration showed 4K 24 FPS video streaming with lower power consumption over Meteor Lake. (Image credit: Ben Wilson | Windows Central)

Despite all the fantastic promises, no Intel representative would reveal specifics to me regarding average or peak TDP when quizzed on any SoC component, so some numbers are still held secret until Lunar Lake OEM devices appear in preparation for a planned launch in the holiday buying cycle this year. Nevertheless, intricate explanations of the impressive new ‘Skymont’ architecture powering Lunar Lake’s improved efficient cores (E-core) showed how the upgraded low-power island can handle most everyday computing tasks.

For battery life, Lunar Lake reduces the SoC power by up to 40%. This is a major step for mobile and you WILL notice it.

Arik Gihon, CPU SoC Architect Lead





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