In the context of the company’s future plan, Intel documentation has disclosed new code names: Bartlett Lake, Wildcat Lake, and a 12-core version of the Bartlett Lake processor composed exclusively of performance cores.
It’s interesting to note that the source—a guide on using Intel’s platforms for real-time computing—is openly accessible. Following a Twitter observation by InstLatX64 (via Videocardz), the latest “gold deck” presentation was removed. Although it lacks the roadmap information that the most current version had, Intel’s March 2025 version is still in use.
“Intel offerings enabling the (Time Coordinated Computing) TCC Experience” is the important slide. Several cores are listed on the PowerPoint as “in development.” The first two are Panther Lake and Nova Lake, which Intel has publicly stated will be the company’s main CPU offerings in 2025 and 2026, respectively. However, the PowerPoint also includes names that Intel hasn’t previously discussed: Bartlett Lake-S, Bartlett Lake S 12P, and Wildcat Lake.
The only information we have about Bartlett Lake is that it is listed by Intel as a Core (but not Core Ultra) Series 2 processor, which may indicate that it will be used in mobile devices. The Bartlett Lake integrated chips were shipped this year at CES 2025.
Additionally, Intel released a product brief for the Bartlett Lake-S, which highlights the processor’s DDR-5600 memory compatibility, PCIe 5.0 connection, and up to 24 cores and 32 threads. The Core 7 variant has up to 24 cores (8 performance cores, 16 efficiency cores, and 32 threads). According to Intel, the edge processors can reach a P-core turbo frequency of 5.6GHz. Intel employs the Xe graphics architecture, which has up to 32 EUs, on this chip family. When combined with a 600-series chipset, the 14th-generation Core family is what Intel refers to as the Bartlett Lake-S.