The
Intel Celeron N5095 comes from the mobile segment of Intels Celeron family and comes from the tenth generation of Celeron processors. The processor was launched in the first quarter of 2021 and is based on the Intel Jasper Lake architecture. The
Intel Celeron N5095 is manufactured with a structure width of 10 nanometers and is based on the BGA 1338 socket, with which the processor can only be installed in a permanently soldered manner.
The processor can be operated under both Linux and Windows, is based on the x86-64 (64-bit) instruction set and supports the ISA extensions SSE4.1, SSE4.2. The level 2 cache of the Intel Celeron N5095 is 1.50 megabytes and the level 3 cache is 4.00 megabytes.
The
Intel Celeron N5095 has 4 cores and does not support Hyperthreading. The clock frequency of the cores is 2.00 gigahertz and can increase to up to 2.50 gigahertz (load of all cores) or 2.90 gigahertz (load of individual cores) in turbo mode. Like all mobile processors from Intel, the Intel Celeron N5095 cannot be overclocked.
The Intel UHD Graphics from the Jasper Lake series with 16 execution units is used as the internal graphics unit in the
Intel Celeron N5095. The graphics unit has a basic clock frequency of 450 megahertz and the maximum dynamic clock is 750 megahertz. The 16 execution units are divided into 128 shader units and achieve an FP32 computing power (single precision) of 384 gigaflops. The iGPU was also used in a processor for the first time in the first quarter of 2021 and the structure width in which the graphics unit is manufactured is also identical at 10 nanometers.
The Intel Celeron N5095 has 2 memory channels available, which can be used to operate up to 16 gigabytes of DDR4-2933 or LPDDR4-2933 RAM. The maximum bandwidth that the RAM achieves is 45.8 GB/s.
- Architecture: Jasper Lake
- High energy efficiency (10 nm manufacturing)
- Integrated Intel UHD Graphics 16 EUs
- Well-suited for everyday tasks