Intel has quietly introduced a new line of 14th-Gen Raptor Lake Refresh processors, the "14001" series. The chips feature only Performance cores (P-cores), ditching the Efficiency cores (E-cores) that have been central to Intel's recent microarchitectures. This new CPU series, designed primarily for embedded systems, includes the Core i9-14901KE as Intel's first overclockable processor for the embedded market ever.https://www.notebookcheck.net/Overclockable-Core-i9-14901KE-among-new-E-core-less-14th-Gen-CPUs-quietly-unveiled-by-Intel.865694.0.html
There's also the i5-12500 which has 6 cores 12 threads, with no E cores at all. It's also more accessible price-wise. On Linux for example the scheduling on hybrid core CPUs hasn't been great up until recent kernel releases.
Is Intel going to address the 13th and 14th gen chips falling apart or just keep releasing stuff and pray that they can sell before someone sues them?