Details of much of Intel's future releases may have leaked onto the internet today, with the publication of a supposed table with specifications for eight processors on a Japanese website. According to her, new models with low power consumption will be launched on the Core i5 (2.4GHz) line and also on the Core i7 (2.53GHz), capable of appearing on lower-cost desktops and (perhaps) even on notebooks.

However, the two processor families achieve far greater results than these, exceeding the technical 3GHz barrier found in most existing products in the industry. While the Core i5 quad-core reach a maximum of 3.2 GHz, the Core i7 reaches 3.46 GHz, also with four cores.
Models will be releaseddual-core within the Core i5 family, with even higher frequencies, ranging from 3.33 GHz (believe me, this is the minimum) to 3.73 GHz. With a power consumption of just 73W, they will also be very good for notebooks and desktops with even more limited dimensions.
Finally, Intel put on the market the first model of the Core i3 line (with versions of 2.93GHz and 3.06GHz), dual-core and without the technology Turbo Boost responsible for increasing the frequency of the products described above. Next to it, a Pentium with a new architecture will be launched, but with a frequency reduced to 2.8GHz.
This part ofroadmap from Intel should be important to Apple in order to renovate a portion of its commercial computers with good internal improvements over the next year causing performance jumps as significant as those of the latest generation of the iMac. In addition, it may be in 2010 that the Mac Pro will reach 12 physical processing cores, but using one of the members of the new Xeon line.
(via Electronist)