Great to see competition returning to the low end CPU market - and of course kudos to Intel for putting pressure on AMD to compete here as well. Kind of weird to bring the 4600G to retail at this point, but ... yay? At least it's an excellent ...
Because these APUs use the same silicon as the equivalent mobile processors, these desktop parts have the same codename as the mobile variants. Both the 2000G and 3000G families were offered at retail, and the 3400G/2400G have both been popular processors. By contrast, we never saw a ...
I/O die's process should have very little to do with max 1:1 speeds in the [true] desktop processors, being monolithic should still benefit Renoir's absolute memory overclocking (max MT/s on async) if we assume Matisse/Renoir/Vermeer UMC capabilities to be roughly eq...
AMD Ryzen 4000 G-Series Renoir APUs vs. AMD and Intel CPUs With Renoir, AMD added Ryzen 7 models to the APU lineup for the first time. The halo eight-core 16-thread 4700G/4750G marks a new maximum core count for AMD's APUs and comes with a 3.6 GHz base and 4.4 GHz boost cloc...
Speaking of the competition, I’ve added a few other Ryzen 7 and Intel i7 and i9 configurations next to this Legion 5 in the following chart. The Legion 5 tops our Cinebench loop test at the moment, and also runs significantly quieter than any of the other rivals in this test. In fa...
They're technically also 65W parts, on paper. All in all, neither the AMD TDP nor PPT tell you too much. They're all "88W PPT", but the 5600X runs cooler than the 3600 as it doesn't max out its stock power limit, and the 4650G runs cooler than both. They're all "142W PPT...
basically the same price and actually beat-out the 2700x that you would've bought for close to double the money yesterday. And those were considered and still are great! But now, they're f-ing worthless because every new chip surpasses the last gen equivalent that was a tier above it. ...