Intel Laak confirms new processors: Lake Bartlett and Lake Wildcat

Intel documentation has revealed additional code names in the context of the future company's roadmap: Wildcat Lake, Bartlett Lake and a 12 -core variant of the Bartlett chip made up entirely of performance nuclei.
Interestingly, the source is public: a guidance document on how to use Intel platforms for real -time computers. The most recent presentation “Gold Deck” has been deleted after a Twitter user, Instlatx64 (via Videocardz), noticed it. The Intel version in March 2025 remains in place, but without the roadmap, the most recent version provided.
The key is a slide that deals with “Intel offers allowing the TCC (time coordinated computing) experience. The slide lists several “developing” hearts. did not discuss publicly.
About all that we know about Lake Bartlett is that Intel lists it like an Intel Core chip (but not ultra core) Series 2, perhaps by deducting that it will end up in the mobile space. As Tom's equipment pointed out earlier, the on -board fleas of Lake Bartlett were dispatched this year to these 2025.
Intel has also published a Bartlett Lake-S product brief, showing that Bartlett Lake S present up to 24 cores and 32 threads, PCIE 5.0 connectivity and DDR-5600 memory management. EDGE processors can hit a 5.6 GHz turbo-core frequency, says Intel; The Core 7 version offers up to 24 cores (8 performance cores, 16 efficiency cores, 32 threads). On this family of chips, Intel uses the XE graphics architecture with up to 32 EUS. Intel refers to Bartlett Lake-S as a member of his basic 14th generation family, twinned with a 600 series chipset.
However, this thesis does not mention an All Performance-Core version, which Intel Update slides indicates. Could Intel prepare a challenger with X3D architecture in AMD?
Intel's thesis, however, does not mention Bartlett Lake -S in the context of the PC – just industrial applications, health care and infrastructure.
Lake Wildcat has also emerged before, perhaps as a PC or slight tablets, which may be built on the 18a process.
Do Lake Bartlett and Lake Wildcat prove to be processors that you will buy? Right now, it looks a little uncertain. But with Intel in the face of the competition from Qualcomm (long battery life) and AMD (high performance), it is not unlikely that intel divides its forces to face these new adversaries.