Architectural Weaknesses Exposed: How GhostWrite Takes Advantage of RISC-V for Root Entry
The New Intel Kingpin: Core I7-14700K Shines with a 7% Single-Core Supremacy over Competitor Core Ultra 7 - Arrow Lake Chip Dominates Benchmarks
Another upcoming Arrow Lake chip, which will compete against thebest CPUs , has appeared for the first time in the Geekbench browser. This time, it pertains to the iGPUless Core Ultra 7 265KF. Discovered byBenchleaks on X , the chip was benchmarked in Geekbench 5.5.1 (the source of the results has now been pulled). It boasts good single-core performance but falters in multi-core performance, lagging behind the last-generationCore i7-14700K .
The Core Ultra 7 265KF scored 2,252 points in the Geekbench 5 single-core test and 17,722 points in the multi-core test. Single-core performance is competitive with Intel’s previous generation Core i7 and Core i9 K-series parts, 7% faster than the Core i7-14700KF and 3% faster than the Core i9-14900K. However, compared to an Arrow Lake-S qualification sample, which we believe to be a Core Ultra 9 285K, the Ultra 7 model loses out, with the Arrow Lake-S qualification sample being 9% quicker in single-threaded performance.
Multi-core performance is where the Core Ultra 7 265KF completely faulters. Compared to the Core i7-14700KF — its direct predecessor, the Raptor Lake Refresh chip beats the 265KF by a whopping 16%. It only gets worse against the higher-trim models. The Core i9-14900K outperforms the 265KF by 45%, and the Arrow Lake-S (Ultra 9 285K) QS beats the 265KF by 54%. Results for the Core i9 and Core i7 models were taken from the first page of results in the Geekbench 5 browser and averaged together.
Swipe to scroll horizontally
CPU | Single-Core | Multi-Core |
---|---|---|
Arrow Lake-S QS (Ultra 9 285K) | 2,455 | 27,381 |
Core i9-14900K | 2,178 | 25,648 |
Core Ultra 7 265KF | 2,252 | 17,722 |
Core i7-14700KF | 2,102 | 20,480 |
The Geekbench listing reveals that the Core Ultra 7 265KF has eight P-cores and 12 E-cores, with clock speeds reaching up to 5.4 GHz. The addition of the “F” nomenclature also suggests the chip has a disabled integrated graphics unit. Compared to the rumored specs of the Core Ultra 9 285K, the 265KF has four fewer E-cores but the same number of P-cores.
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As always, take these results with a pinch of salt. The conditions in which the Core Ultra 7 was running are unknown. However, we won’t see what Arrow Lake is capable of until in a few months, as Intel’s next-generation chips have been rumored to launch in October, while AMD’s Ryzen 9000 lineup is just right around the corner.
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- Title: Architectural Weaknesses Exposed: How GhostWrite Takes Advantage of RISC-V for Root Entry
- Author: George
- Created at : 2025-01-16 19:08:01
- Updated at : 2025-01-18 19:18:35
- Link: https://hardware-tips.techidaily.com/architectural-weaknesses-exposed-how-ghostwrite-takes-advantage-of-risc-v-for-root-entry/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.