I don't think these are ideal. It is kind of tough because AMD doesn't have a Sawtooth or Skymont-LP equivalent. I really like the idea of Apple's 2 big core and 4 true little core arrangement. But if you must have performance, I feel like the 4+4 config is maybe a more well balanced core configuration for a laptop CPU. WIth that said, I wouldn't hate the idea of a 2+6 config especially if your little cores got a lot of grunt like skymont. But back to AMD because they don't have a true LP core (just a slightly more compact layout/synthesis) I feel like a true 15W and below segment CPU from AMD might be best served with a 2 Zen + 2 Zen C. If they must have "muh performance" give it 4 Zen C. The Zen C cores have a good bit of muscle to them but are a bit thirsty and big. IMO that calls for AMD using fewer cores than LNL. But the extra grunt from their cores should in theory make up for some of the core count deficit. The rest of the SOC has a lot of room for improvement too, but I don't even want to pretend to give suggestions on what to do better as I wouldn't have even the faintest idea.
OT - but I really liked when AMD was doing the "cat" cores -- I had built a few low power Linux workstation/server systems around them (dirt cheap Athlon 5350, etc).
I agree they don't have full equivalents to Intel, though FWIW the "Ryzen Z2 Extreme" *appears to have* 3 x Zen 5 + 5 x Zen 5C cores. (Yes weird, but inbetween your 4+4 and 2+6

). These are 28W TDP that can be limited further.
Googling Performance: "below HX 370 and Intel 258V, but within the same performance envelop" (presumably 28W TDP).
*appears because AMD doesn't specify the makeup on their website, but every other source I've checked indicates this configuration.
I'll have to do some analysis on Skymont vs. Zen 5C. Skymont has IPC in the range of Zen 3 or maybe slightly higher; and IIRC can actually clock (~20+%?) higher than Zen 5C.
I'll just add that I think the # of cores needed for laptop really depends on use case. A personal machine running basic background stuff (Windows+Defender) needs less "compact/cool/efficient" cores than a corporate laptop that can run as many as 50 independent security / forensics / update / logging / etc. agents (from various vendors) simultaneously.
When I worked at large corporations, it was a easier to meet security requirements on the Mac with a smaller # of unique tools than it was on Windows. That's a combination of pickyness by Cybersecurity firms, but also greater fragmentation of offerings too. That meant all things else being equal, a Macbook would be more performant than a Windows laptop. tl;dr - Apple doesn't need as many "e-cores" for corporate use as Windows typically does.
But like I have said before I think AMD has somewhat squandered their limited time with a process lead by not putting down bigger prepays and moving to new nodes sooner.
This is actually a historic recurring theme with AMD. They made the same mistake with the K8 chip where they talked about using "Chartered Semiconductor" to make K8-based server and desktop chips for a couple of years and then nothing ever happened. They limited their server and desktop marketshare through lack of capacity, even when they had a few years to run wild (2003-2006). There's an argument they made the same mistake with K7.
Maybe, that logic works back in the day. But now I don't buy it. AMD has tons of money and has had rapid stock growth. As for client, there is no more important market to invest in. That would be like if AMD said they weren't going to prioritize DC GPUs because they wanted to double down on taking market share from GeForce with Radeon. Yes maybe NVIDIA is easier to out do in client than DC, but looking at that market and saying you don't want to gun for it feels like bad business (especially when your stock price has so rapidly outpaced earnings growth).
This is in reference to the "U" market.
I still think the "U" market is more of an uphill battle for AMD right now vs. Intel than just expanding other segments:
- Desktops and Server - AMD has the mindshare already - there's no "ceiling"
- Servers are the highest margin, no questions - so priority #1
- Desktops are easy chips to share yields with server
- Intel has been consistently competitive in the U space forever, even when their server and desktop offerings are weak
- The U space requires a little more work than desktop for integration purposes
- "Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM" still exists in some form for buying corporate laptops from Intel
I'm 100% with you they need to go after this market, but I'm guessing the culture of not gambling on too much capacity and keeping engineering talent focused on "less better quality products" has them shying away from U vs. Server, Desktop, and high power mobile.