The Intel Core 7 150HL uses an LGA 1700 socket and is fabricated on a 10nm process node, with a Thermal Design Power of 45W and a maximum operating temperature of 100°C. It supports 64-bit computing and includes integrated graphics, making it capable of handling display output without a discrete GPU. The chip implements PCIe version 4 for peripheral connectivity.
The processor uses big.LITTLE technology to split its workload across two core types, with six cores clocked at 2.4GHz and eight efficiency cores running at 1.8GHz, totaling 20 threads for concurrent task handling. It can reach a turbo clock speed of 5GHz under peak demand, aided by a clock multiplier of 24, though the multiplier is locked and cannot be adjusted. A 24MB L3 cache supports the core complex by reducing memory latency during sustained workloads.
The integrated graphics solution is the Iris Xe Graphics 96EU, featuring 96 execution units alongside 768 shading units, 48 texture mapping units, and 24 render output units. Its base clock sits at 300MHz and scales up to a turbo frequency of 1500MHz, with support for up to four displays simultaneously. On the API side, it is compatible with DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 3, covering a broad range of graphics and compute workloads.
The processor supports DDR5 memory across two channels, with a maximum rated speed of 5200MHz and a capacity ceiling of 96GB. ECC memory is not supported, which is typical for consumer-oriented processors in this class.
The processor supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection against certain types of malicious code execution. Its instruction set support spans MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, covering a wide range of operations from legacy multimedia instructions through to modern vector and cryptographic workloads.