The Intel Core Ultra 7 268V is a laptop processor built on a 3 nm semiconductor process, giving it a compact and efficient physical foundation. It operates within a Thermal Design Power of 17W and reaches a maximum CPU temperature of 100 °C. The chip includes integrated graphics and supports 64-bit computing, along with PCIe 5 for modern connectivity.
The processor runs at a base speed of 4 x 2.2 GHz across its two sets of cores, with all 8 threads capable of reaching a turbo clock speed of 5 GHz when conditions allow. It employs big.LITTLE technology to manage workloads across different core types, and carries a clock multiplier of 22. The 12 MB of L3 cache supports data access for active tasks, while the absence of an unlocked multiplier means clock speeds remain within their factory-defined limits.
In PassMark testing, the processor achieves a multi-thread score of 20232, reflecting its overall throughput across all cores and threads. Its single-thread result of 4212 indicates the per-core processing capability recorded under the same benchmark framework.
The integrated graphics solution is the Arc Graphics 140V, featuring 8 execution units and a turbo frequency of 2000 MHz. It supports DirectX 12 Ultimate, along with OpenGL 4.6 and OpenCL 3, covering a range of graphics and compute workloads. Up to three displays can be connected simultaneously, rounding out its output capabilities.
The processor supports DDR5 memory across two channels, with a maximum RAM speed of 8533 MHz and a ceiling of 32 GB total installed memory. ECC memory is not supported, placing it within the standard consumer and mainstream laptop segment of memory configurations.
The processor supports a range of instruction sets including MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, enabling compatibility with a broad set of software-level operations spanning encryption, floating-point math, and vectorized processing. It does not use multithreading, meaning each core handles one thread at a time. The inclusion of the NX bit provides a hardware-level memory protection feature to help guard against certain classes of malicious code execution.