Do that and you’ll likely get variations of these answers:
“The first-gen chip was Core on laptops and Core 2 on desktops, which changed Intel from a second-place chump back to being Rocky Balboa again. Cue Eye of the Tiger.”
Nope.
“It was the original Core i7 chip, codenamed Nehalem, because that was the first Core i7 chip.”
Wrong-a-mundo.
“It was actually the originally 8086, because Intel considers everything from 8086 up until Pentium 4 as first-gen.”
Ummm, no.
The actual first-gen Core processor, Intel told me, is—drum roll please—the Core i5-655K “Clarkdale” on desktops or “Arrandale” in laptops.
Whaaa... Never heard of it Don't feel bad. Few people have.
It was a dual-core processor based on the 32nm “Westmere” cores that had already been introduced with the six-core Core i7-980X CPU. And what makes this chip first-gen, while other Westmere-based CPUs (as well as the two previous Core i7 CPUs) don’t rate a “gen” rating
The graphics core.
With Clarkdale and Arrandale, Intel integrated its first graphics core ever into a CPU package. And unlike a modern day “6th gen” Skylake processor, Intel didn’t have the capability to actually put the graphics into the CPU die itself back then. Instead, the graphics were a separate chip that sat next to the two x86 CPU cores, as you can see from the above picture.
What’s really odd is why Intel started to use the graphics core as the primary demarcation line. It may not be purely intentional. I do remember Intel talking about its graphics being the second generation or third generation at some point, but somewhere along the line, it stuck. Today you can’t go five feet into the computer aisle at a store without seeing that Skylake is the “6th gen CPU” on a spec card, or Haswell being described as the “4th gen” chip.
Keep in mind that processor “generations” have many different meanings to many different people. There’s a first-gen Pentium and a a first-gen Pentium 4, for example, but when you hear Intel and PC OEMs saying Skylake's the “6th gen chip,” it’s specifically referring to the CPUs with integrated graphics chips.
This isn’t the first time Intel has essentially rebooted things.
Remember that the original 8086 eventually lead up to the 486 before Intel adopted “Pentium” because it couldn't trademark numbers. That took us to the Pentium MMX, Pentium II, III and Pentium 4 (and many models in between) before the naming convention was restarted once again with the Core line.