Both chips feature 4MB of cache, a 7W TDP, and package-on-package LPDDR4X-4267 memory.
With the official launch today comes concrete details on the two chips that will be available to OEMs for ultra mobile devices: Intel’s Core i3-L13G4 and the Core i5-L16G7. Both of the SoCs feature a total of 5 cores, which is perhaps an odd arrangement for an Intel processor, with another notable being that there isn’t HyperThreading support. Both chips feature 4MB of cache, a low 7W TDP, a graphics clock of 500MHz, and package-on-package fast LPDDR4X-4267 memory.
Where the two chips primarily differ is with regards to clock speeds and GPU configuration. The Core i3-L13G4 features a base CPU clock of 800MHz, a maximum [single-core] turbo clock of 2.8GHz, and an all-core turbo clock of 1.3GHz, while its GPU has 48 execution units. As for the Core i5-L16G7, it has a loftier base CPU clock of 1.4GHz, a single-core turbo clock of 3GHz, and an all-core clock of 1.8GHz. The Core i5 chip also sees the number of execution units for the GPU climb to 64.