The new chips are Intel's first desktop processors (outside of servers) to be manufactured on some version of the company's 10 nm manufacturing, but you won't see '10 nm' in any of Intel's marketing materials or product pages. The first six processors in the lineup are available for preorder now and will be available starting November 4. Now, Intel is attempting a course correction in the form of its 12th-generation core CPUs, codenamed Alder Lake.
But when you add features without improving the manufacturing process, you get exactly what Rocket Lake delivered: a processor that is a bit faster but also a lot hotter, with much higher power usage than either the 10th-generation Intel CPUs that preceded them or the AMD Ryzen 5000-series CPUs they compete against. They did improve performance, usually, by backporting features from newer and faster processor architectures. Further Reading Intel 11th-generation Rocket Lake-S gaming CPUs did not impress us