• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Intel Introduces IoT-Enhanced Processors to Increase Performance, AI, Security

September 23, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

What’s New: Today at the Intel Industrial Summit 2020, Intel announced new enhanced internet of things (IoT) capabilities. The 11th Gen Intel® Core™ processors, Intel Atom® x6000E series, and Intel® Pentium® and Celeron® N and J series bring new artificial intelligence (AI), security, functional safety and real-time capabilities to edge customers. With a robust hardware and software portfolio, an unparalleled ecosystem and 15,000 customer deployments globally, Intel is providing robust solutions for the $65 billion edge silicon market opportunity by 2024.

“By 2023, up to 70% of all enterprises will process data at the edge.1 11th Gen Intel Core processors, Intel Atom x6000E series, and Intel Pentium and Celeron N and J series processors represent our most significant step forward yet in enhancements for IoT, bringing features that address our customers’ current needs, while setting the foundation for capabilities with advancements in AI and 5G.”

— John Healy, Intel vice president of the Internet of Things Group and general manager of Platform Management and Customer Engineering

Why It’s Important: Intel works closely with customers to build proofs of concept, optimize solutions and collect feedback along the way. Innovations delivered with 11th Gen Intel Core processors, Intel Atom x6000E series, and Intel Pentium and Celeron N and J series processors are a response to challenges felt across the IoT industry: edge complexity, total cost of ownership and a range of environmental conditions.

Combining a common and seamless developer experience with software and tools like the Edge Software Hub’s Edge Insights for Industrial and the Intel® Distribution of OpenVINO™ toolkit, Intel helps customers and developers get to market faster and deliver more powerful outcomes with optimized, containerized packages to enable sensing, vision, automation and other transformative edge applications. For example, when combined with 11th Gen’s SuperFin process improvements and other enhancements, OpenVINO running on an 11th Gen Core i5 delivers amazing AI performance: up to 2 times faster inferences per second than a prior 8th Gen Core i5-8500 processor when running on just the CPU in each product.2

About 11th Gen Core Processors: Building on the recently announced client processors, 11th Gen Core is enhanced specifically for essential IoT applications that require high-speed processing, computer vision and low-latency deterministic computing. It delivers up to a 23% performance gain in single-thread performance, a 19% gain in multithread performance and up to a 2.95x performance gain in graphics gen on gen.3 New dual-video decode boxes allow the processor to ingest up to 40 simultaneous video streams at 1080p 30 frames per second and output up to four channels of 4K or two channels of 8K video. AI-inferencing algorithms can run on up to 96 graphic execution units (INT8) or run on the CPU with vector neural network instructions (VNNI) built in. With Intel® Time Coordinated Computing (Intel® TCC Technology) and time-sensitive networking (TSN) technologies, 11th Gen processors enable real-time computing demands while delivering deterministic performance across a variety of use cases:

Industrial sector: Mission-critical control systems (PLC, robotics, etc.), industrial PCs and human-machine interfaces.
Retail, banking and hospitality: Intelligent, immersive digital signage, interactive kiosks and automated checkout.
Healthcare: Next-generation medical imaging devices with high-resolution displays and AI-powered diagnostics.
Smart city: Smart network video recorders with onboard AI inferencing and analytics.
Intel’s 11th Gen Core processors already have over 90 partners committed to delivering solutions to meet customers’ demands.

About Intel Atom x6000E Series and Intel Pentium and Celeron N and J Series Processors: These represent Intel’s first processor platform enhanced for IoT. They deliver enhanced real-time performance and efficiency; up to 2 times better 3D graphics;4 a dedicated real-time offload engine; Intel® Programmable Services Engine, which supports out-of-band and in-band remote device management; enhanced I/O and storage options; and integrated 2.5GbE time-sensitive networking. They can support 4Kp60 resolution on up to three simultaneous displays, meet strict functional safety requirements with the Intel® Safety Island and include built-in hardware-based security. These processors5 have a variety of use cases, including:

Industrial: Real-time control systems and devices that meet functional safety requirements for industrial robots and for chemical, oil field and energy grid-control applications.
Transportation: Vehicle controls, fleet monitoring and management systems that synchronize inputs from multiple sensors and direct actions in semiautonomous buses, trains, ships and trucks.
Healthcare: Medical displays, carts, service robots, entry-level ultrasound machines, gateways and kiosks that require AI and computer vision with reduced energy consumption.
Retail and hospitality: Fixed and mobile point-of-sale systems for retail and quick service restaurant with high-resolution graphics.
The Intel Atom x6000E series and Intel Pentium and Celeron N and J series already have over 100 partners committed to delivering solutions.

About the Intel Industrial Summit: Intel is bringing the Industrial IoT (IIoT) ecosystem together to address their specific challenges while expanding what’s possible for tomorrow’s autonomous operations. With over 40 partners and sessions plus nine demos, customers will learn about secure, interoperable, integrated solutions available to transform their business by reducing the time, costs and risks that come with IIoT deployments.

More Context: Intel Industrial Summit (Press Kit) | Intel Industrial Hub | 11th Gen Intel Core Processors Platform Brief (Product Brief) | Intel Atom x6000E Series and Pentium and Celeron N and J Series Platform Brief (Product Brief) | Intel Internet of Things News | Intel IOT | Intel IoT Solutions Alliance | Intel Solutions Marketplace | Introducing the Intel 11th Gen Core Processors Enhanced for IoT (Video) | Introducing the Intel Atom x6000E Series (Video)

About Intel

Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) is an industry leader, creating world-changing technology that enables global progress and enriches lives. Inspired by Moore’s Law, we continuously work to advance the design and manufacturing of semiconductors to help address our customers’ greatest challenges. By embedding intelligence in the cloud, network, edge and every kind of computing device, we unleash the potential of data to transform business and society for the better. To learn more about Intel’s innovations, go to newsroom.intel.com and intel.com.

Software and workloads used in performance tests may have been optimized for performance only on Intel microprocessors.

Performance tests, such as SYSmark and MobileMark, are measured using specific computer systems, components, software, operations, and functions. Any change to any of those factors may cause the results to vary. You should consult other information and performance tests to assist you in fully evaluating your contemplated purchases, including the performance of that product when combined with other products. For more complete information, visit http://www.intel.com/benchmarks.

Performance results are based on testing as of dates shown in configurations and may not reflect all publicly available updates. See backup for configuration details. No product or component can be absolutely secure.

Intel’s compilers may or may not optimize to the same degree for non-Intel microprocessors for optimizations that are not unique to Intel microprocessors. These optimizations include SSE2, SSE3, and SSSE3 instruction sets and other optimizations. Intel does not guarantee the availability, functionality, or effectiveness of any optimization on microprocessors not manufactured by Intel. Microprocessor-dependent optimizations in this product are intended for use with Intel microprocessors. Certain optimizations not specific to Intel microarchitecture are reserved for Intel microprocessors. Please refer to the applicable product User and Reference Guides for more information regarding the specific instruction sets covered by this notice.

SPEC®, SPECrate® and SPEC CPU® are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. See http://www.spec.org/spec/trademarks.html for more information.

Results that are based on systems and components as well as results that have been estimated or simulated using an Intel Reference Platform (an internal example new system), internal Intel analysis or architecture simulation or modeling are provided to you for informational purposes only. Results may vary based on future changes to any systems, components, specifications or configurations.

Statements in this document that refer to future plans or expectations are forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations and involve many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. For more information on the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially, see our most recent earnings release and SEC filings at www.intc.com.

Customer is responsible for the overall system and system level safety where Intel Products are used, including compliance to any applicable regulatory standards or safety-related requirements. Intel bears no responsibility, liability, or fault for any integration or system level issues associated with the inclusion of the Intel Products into a system, including where the failure of the system could result in personal injury. It is Customer’s responsibility to design, manage, and assure safeguards to anticipate, monitor, and control component, system, quality, and or safety failures.

Not all features are available on all SKUs.

Not all features are supported in every operating system.

Intel may change availability of products and support at any time without notice.

Your costs and results may vary.

Refer to https://software.intel.com/articles/optimization-notice for more information regarding performance and optimization choices in Intel software products.

1 IDC FutureScape, Worldwide Internet of Things 2020 Predictions

2 Performance results obtained on September 9, 2020

Tiger Lake system configuration.

CPU: Intel® Core™ i5-1145G7E @ 2.6 GHz,

Motherboard: Intel prototype, TigerLake U DDR4 SODIMM RVP

Memory: 2 x 8 GB @ 3200 MHz DDR4

Hard disk: Intel® 250 GByte SSD

Graphics: Intel® Gaussian and Neural Accelerator 2.0 96 EU

OS: Ubuntu* 18.4 LTS, (kernel 5.8.0-050800-generic)

OpenVINO™: OV-2021.1.075 (pre-release, engineering build)

Coffee Lake system configuration:

CPU: Intel® Core™ i5-8500T @ 3.00 GHz,

Motherboard: AsusTek* Computer Inc. Prime Z370A

Memory: 2×16 GB @ 2667 MHz. DDR4

Hard disk: Intel® 500GB SSD

Graphics: Intel Corporation UHD Graphics 630

OS: Ubuntu* 18.04 LTS, (kernel: 5.3.0-24-generic)

OpenVINO(TM) pre-release build OV-2021.1.075

Compiler: gcc (Ubuntu 7.5.0-3ubuntu1~18.04) 7.5.0

OV-Libraries: CPU: MKLDNNPlugin version ……… 2.1, Build ……….. 2021.1.0-1117-062a4e29003,

GPU: clDNNPlugin version ……… 2.1, Build ……….. 2021.1.0-1117-062a4e29003,

MULTI: MultiDevicePlugin version ……… 2.1, Build ……….. 2021.1.0-1117-062a4e29003,

Dataset (size, shape): IMAGENET. Resnet-50 (224×224), Squeezenet (227×227)

VOC2012: Deeplabv3 (513×513), SSD-300 (300×300), Mobilenet-SSD (300×300)

Precision: FP16-INT8

3 Source: Intel. Performance claim based on SPEC CPU 2017 metrics estimated by measurements on Intel internal reference platforms completed on August 27, 2020. Graphics claim based on 3DMark11_V1.0.4 Graphics Score estimated by measurements on Intel internal reference platforms on August 27, 2020. Testing Configuration:

Processor: Intel® Core™ i7 1185G7E PL1=15W TDP, 4C8T Turbo up to 4.4GHz

Graphics: Intel Graphics Gen 12 gfxMemory: 16GB DDR4-3200

Storage: Intel SSDPEKKW512GB (512 GB, PCI-E 3.0 x4)

OS: Windows* 10 Pro (x64) Build 19041.331 (2004/ May 2020 Update).

Power policy set to AC/Balanced mode for all benchmarks. All benchmarks run in Admin mode & Tamper Protection Disabled / De-fender Disabled.

Bios: Intel Corporation TGLSFWI1.R00.3333.A00.2008122042

OneBKC: tgl_b2b0_up3_pv_up4_qs_ifwi_2020_ww32_4_01

Processor: Intel® Core™ i7 – 8665UE 15W PL1=15W TDP, 4C8T Turbo up to 4.4GHz

Graphics: Intel Graphics Gen 9 gfxMemory: 16GB DDR4-2400

Storage: Intel SSD 545S (512GB)

OS: Windows* 10 Enterprise (x64) Build 18362.175 (1903/ May 2019 Update).

Power policy set to AC/Balanced mode for all benchmarks. All benchmarks run in Admin mode & Tamper Protection Dis-abled / Defender Disabled.

Bios: CNLSFWR1.R00.X208.B00.1905301319

4 Source: Intel. Claims based on a) SPEC CPU 2006 metric estimates based on Pre-Si projections and b) 3DMark11 estimates based on Pre-Si projections, using Intel® Pentium® J4205 as prior gen.

Configurations:

Performance results are based on projections as of September 1, 2020

Processor: Intel® Pentium® J6425 PL1=10W TDP, 4C4T Turbo up to 3.0GHz

Graphics: Intel Graphics Gen 11 gfx

Memory: 16GB LPDDR4-3200

OS: Windows 10 Pro

Compiler version: IC18

Processor: Intel® Pentium® J4205 PL1=10W TDP, 4C4T Turbo up to 2.6GHz

Graphics: Intel® Graphics Gen 9 gfx

Memory: 16GB LPDDR4-2400

OS: Windows 10 Pro

Compiler version: IC18

Performance numbers are Pre-Si projections and are subject to change. Results reported may need to be revised as additional testing is conducted. The results depend on the specific platform configurations and workloads utilized in the testing, and may not be applicable to any particular users components, computer system or workloads. The results are not necessarily representative of other benchmarks.

5 Not all features are available on all SKUs.

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Dify Raises $30 Million to Power the Next Wave of Production AI Applications
  • Nscale’s $2 Billion Bet on the Physical Backbone of the AI Economy
  • Why USB-C Charging on the MacBook Neo Raises Questions About Port Durability
  • MagSafe Wireless Charging: The Magnetic Reinvention of Power
  • Apple Unveils MacBook Neo: A $599 Entry Into the Mac Ecosystem
  • Apple Unveils M5 Pro and M5 Max: A New Era for MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and Studio Display
  • Apple iPhone 17e: Performance, Practicality, and a Smarter Entry Point into the iPhone 17 Family
  • Apple iPad Air M4 Arrives With 12GB Memory, Wi-Fi 7, and a Serious AI Push
  • Ericsson and Intel Are Redefining What 6G Is Actually For
  • Hollow-Core Fibre, Light Running Through Air Instead of Glass

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Beyond Shipyards: Stephen Carmel’s Maritime Warning and the Hard Reality of Rebuilding an Oceanic System
Memory Crunch: Why Prices Are Surging and Why Making More Memory Isn’t Easy
The End of Accounting as We Knew It
The Era of Superhuman Logistics Has Arrived: Building the First Autonomous Freight Network
Why Nvidia Shares Jumped on Meta, and Why the Market Cared
Accrual Launches With $75M to Push AI-Native Automation Into Core Accounting Workflows
Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Moment, or How Regulation Became a Competitive Handicap
Palantir Q4 2025: From Earnings Beat to Model Re-Rating
Baseten Raises $300M to Dominate the Inference Layer of AI, Valued at $5B
Nvidia’s China Problem Is Self-Inflicted, and Washington Should Stop Pretending Otherwise
Armadin Raises $189.9 Million to Build an AI Attacker That Defends the Enterprise
Day Zero Threat Research Summit, August 30 – September 1, 2026, Las Vegas
CrowdStrike Returns to Profit as Revenue Climbs to $1.31 Billion in Q4
Cloudflare 2026 Threat Report Signals the Automation of Cyberwar
Fal.Con Gov 2026, March 18, Washington, D.C.
Huper Corporation Raises $1.5M Pre-Seed to Build a Security-First AI Chief of Staff
CyberBay Summit 2026, March 11–13, Tampa, Florida
Zscaler’s Q2 Beat and the Market’s Reluctance to Celebrate
AI as the New Insider: Why Trust, Not Code, Is Now the Weakest Link
Cybersecurity Meets Corporate Travel: Darktrace Chooses AI-Driven Navan to Power Global Mobility

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Why Attraction-Grabbing Stations Win at Tech Events
Why Nvidia Let Go of Arm, and Why It Matters Now
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
Parallel Museums: Why the Future of Art Might Be Copies, Not Originals
ClickHouse Series D, The $400M Bet That Data Infrastructure, Not Models, Will Decide the AI Era
AI Productivity Paradox: When Speed Eats Its Own Gain
Voice AI as Infrastructure: How Deepgram Signals a New Media Market Segment
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei
360° Mobility Mega Shows 2026, April 14–17, Taipei
Forrester CX Summit Series 2026: Amsterdam, New York, San Francisco
IAMPHENOM 2026, March 10–12, Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia
Billington State and Local CyberSecurity Summit, March 9–11, 2026, Washington, D.C.
Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2026 – 2–5 March, Barcelona, Spain
The AI Summit London, 10–11 June 2026, Tobacco Dock, London
aim10x Digital 2026, March 18, Virtual
Harvard Business Review Strategy Summit, February 26, 2026, Virtual
International Compact Modeling Conference, July 30–31, 2026, Long Beach, California

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography