Core chips of the sixth generation will appear at the end of the second quarter of 2015

VR-Zone
reports a fresh leak from Chinese sources, which indicates how Intel is going to promote two micro-architectures at once this year. The fact is that the appearance of Broadwell was late, and because of this, in 2015, processors of three generations will be sold at once.
Intel remains committed to the tick-to-do strategy. Broadwell is a “tick”, that is, a reduction in process technology and power consumption without much improvement in performance. Skylake is an improvement in performance on the same technical process as that of its predecessor. Intel was somewhat late with Broadwell, which for all terms should have appeared in 2014. As a result, 2015 will be a year of confusion.
')
The six- and eight-core expensive, “hot” and powerful Haswell-E processors for enthusiasts will be sold throughout 2015. Replacing them will only appear at the beginning of next year, and this will be Broadwell-E, and not a processor on the Skylake micro-architecture. There will also be a 65-watt Broadwell-K for LGA1150 motherboards with a Series 8 and 9 chipset.
It is believed that, unlike Broadwell, Skylake will require a chipset upgrade and will be based on the LGA1151. In addition to Skylake-S, Skylake-K will appear with an open multiplier. The first to appear is a U-series for mobile devices with a heat dissipation of 15 and 28 watts. Skylake microarchitecture will have a number of new products: Thunderbolt 3.0, more executable instructions per clock, DDR4 and native support for SATA Express. New Intel Atom processors with Braswell micro-architecture will appear in the second quarter of this year.
