According to a leak from aWeibo user, Huawei’s chip development unit is working on a next-generation Kirin processor for PCs in addition to releasing the HiSiliconKirin 9010smartphone application processor. That part will feature the company’s next-generation general-purpose cores and a revamped GPU. Huawei reportedly hopes the new Kirin will compete againstApple’s M3in multi-thread workloads.

Huawei’s upcoming HiSilicon Kirin processor is projected to feature eight general-purpose Arm cores, including four next-generation high-performance Taishan V130 cores (theKirin 9000suses Taishan V120 cores) and four energy-efficient cores. The system-on-chip is expected to integrate the company’s next-generation Mailiang 920 GPU with 10 clusters, bringing a vast performance uplift compared to the Kirin 9000s, which features a quad-cluster Mailiang 910 GPU.

HiSilicon

The new Kirin processor will reportedly support up to 32GB of memory, which suggests it will have a 128-bit interface for LPDDR5/LPDDR5X or DDR5 SDRAM.

In general, Huawei expects its next-generation HiSilicon Kirin SoC for client PCs to offer multi-thread performance close to Apple’s M3 and graphics performance close to that of Apple M2. However, it is unclear how the next-gen Kirin processor for desktops and laptops will perform against Intel’s 16-core Core Ultra 9 185H (6P, 8E, 2LP) platform that powers Huawei’s latestMatebook X Pro laptop.

Anton Shilov

Undoubtedly, Huawei’s next-generation Kirin processor for client PCs looks quite impressive. Whether its performance will be on par with Apple’s M3 orM2remains to be seen, but the tech giant’s ambitions are evident.

The leak claims that Huawei’s HiSilicon could release higher-performance Kirin SoCs in “Pro” and “Max” configurations, similar to Apple, with more general-purpose cores, revamped GPU, and a more comprehensive memory interface.

Given that Huawei does not control 8% to 10% of the global PC market (like Apple does), building higher-end flavors of its Kirin processors for desktops and laptops may not make sense. However, because China’s objective is self-sufficiency in the semiconductor field, Huawei’s high-performance Kirin processors could be instrumental in replacing higher-end parts from AMD and Intel from PCs used by various government agencies. From this point of view, it is strategically feasible for the company to pursue such an endeavor.

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The only question is whether Huawei’s manufacturing partner SMIC will have enough leading-edge production capacity to make all the chips that Huawei needs.

Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.