It is reported that the non-volatile memory stick with Cascade Lake will have 128GB, 256GB and 512GB capacity.
Next year, the Xeon family will upgrade to the Cooper Lake architecture, still 14nm, integrating the new generation of DLBoost instruction set BFLOAT16.
Finally, Ice Lake is now confirmed to be the codename for Intel's first generation 10nm server CPU in 2020.
Previously, it was considered the successor of Cannon Lake, but Intel now separates the consumer and enterprise architectures, and the second generation of consumer-grade 10nm is unknown.
Another roadmap leaked previously (not officially confirmed) shows that the Cascade Lake-SP uses the LGA3647 interface, and the number of Cooper Lake-SP interfaces will reach 4,189.
It is worth mentioning that since Google customized Xeon to Intel in 2008, more than 50% of the Xeon chips shipped today are personalized by Intel according to customer needs (such as scenarios, loads).