The
Intel Processor N200 comes from the mobile segment of Intels CPU program and is based on the Alder Lake N architecture. There is no direct predecessor to this processor, but it comes from the 13th generation of Intels Processor N family.
The
Intel Processor N200 came onto the market in the first quarter of 2023 and is manufactured with a structure width of 10 nanometers. It has a 4.00 megabyte level 2 and a 6.00 megabyte level 3 cache. It is based on a normal processor core architecture with 4 cores. The processor cores clock at 1.80 gigahertz and the maximum turbo clock when a single core is loaded is 3.70 gigahertz. If all 4 processor cores are used in parallel, the processor clock is slightly below the maximum clock at a maximum of 3.40 gigahertz. Hyperthreading technology is not supported by the Intel Processor N200, which leaves it with 4 cores and 4 threads.
Like all processors from the mobile segment, the
Intel Processor N200 also has an internal graphics unit; Intel UHD Graphics with 32 execution units of the Alder Lake architecture is used here. This iGPU clocks at 750 megahertz and, in addition to the 32 execution units already mentioned in the name, also has 256 shader units. Like the processor, it is manufactured with a structure width of 10 nanometers and was released together with the processor in the first quarter of 2023.
The
Intel Processor N200 is equipped with a single memory channel, which means the processor can be operated with up to 16 gigabytes of RAM, of which the built-in graphics unit uses up to 8GB. The supported memory types are LPDDR5-4800, DDR5-4800, DDR4-3200 and this achieves memory bandwidths of 25.6 to 38.4 gigabits per second. Memory with automatic error correction is not supported by the Intel Processor N200.
- High energy efficiency through modern architecture
- Integrated graphics for everyday tasks
- Good balance of cost and functionality