Intel Braswell processors are built with 14 nm manufacturing process and are designed for entry-level desktops and notebooks with lower power consumption and lower TDP. Today, Intel has quietly launched four new processor based on Braswell microarchitecture.

Those CPUs include Celeron N3000, N3050, N3150, and Pentium N3700. Intel Celeron N3000 and N3050 are a dual-core processor with 1 MB L2, Gen 8-LP graphics, DDR3-1600 memory support. The differences between them are in TDP ratings and core clocks, where the N3000 is clocked 1.04 GHz with Turbo Boost speed of 2.08 GHz and 4 W TDP, while the N3050 works at 1.6 GHz and Turbo Boost up to 2.16 GHz and has a 6 W TDP.

The Celeron N3150 and the Pentium N3700 are quad-core chips that are very similar too. Both have 2 MB L2 cache, 6W TDP rating and have a base clock of 1.6 GHz. The difference is in Turbo Boost speeds, where the Celeron N3150 works at 2.08 GHz, while the Pentium N3700 has works at 2.4 GHz.

All processors feature 14 nm Airmont cores, which are the successor to Intel's 22nm Bay Trail-D.