Every year, Intel releases a new line of CPUs: in 2011 we got Sandy Bridge, last year brought us Ivy Bridge, and this year is bringing us Haswell. Each of these new architectures typically increases performance by a bit while consuming the same amount of power (and often less). However, the really interesting thing about Intel’s recent processors has been their GPUs, not their CPUs.
The company’s graphics improvements since the beginning of the decade have been particularly impressive: pre-Sandy Bridge GPUs were near-useless for high-end gaming, but Ivy Bridge’s HD 4000 graphics chip in particular made high-end gaming possible on Intel’s GPUs, at least at lower resolutions and settings. This isn’t something that you could have said in 2010.
With Haswell, Intel will continue to up its game (and its gaming performance), and the company has just officially announced details about its latest GPUs, the performance that we can expect from them, and the products we can expect them to appear in.
“HD Graphics” becomes “Iris”
Ivy Bridge CPUs can come paired with one of three GPUs: HD Graphics 4000, the highest-performing (and most common) part; HD Graphics 2500, a less performant version of the same architecture that uses six of Intel’s graphics execution units (EUs) rather than the HD 4000’s 16; and HD graphics, which performs at roughly the same level as the HD 2500 part but removes Intel’s QuickSync video encoding feature and a few other video-related capabilities.
Haswell’s new GPUs expand the number of performance tiers to five and cover different types of devices, power envelopes, and price points just as Intel’s CPU portfolio has continued to grow over the years. The three top-performing parts are the ones that Intel is focusing on today.
We’ll start with Ultrabooks, which two of these three GPUs are designed to fit inside. The higher-performing of these two GPUs sheds the HD Graphics moniker for a new name: the Iris Graphics 5100. Intel’s 3DMark11 tests show this part as being just over twice as fast as Ivy Bridge’s HD 4000 chip, and while we’ll actually want to play some games with both GPUs to see how these benchmarks translate to real life, that’s an impressive gain.

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