AMD Zen 4, RDNA 3 to repeat recently seen generational leaps – CPU – News



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After a long time of practice with the first AMD Ryzen 5000 processors in HEXUS labs, we can comfortably say that these Zen 3 processors did not disappoint. The HEXUS editor concluded that in addition to offering “excellent multi-threaded performance”, the new family of processors “Now it’s great to play.” Similar sentiments have been shared by other tech sites, tech YouTubers, and the PC gaming and enthusiast communities.

At the time of writing, we’re pretty sure the AMD Radeon RX 6000 line features an equally impressive generational leap. However, the public knowledge data on this GPU is not that convincing, as third-party reviews remain under NDA until the first products, Radeon RX 6800 XT and RX 6800, are released on Wednesday the 18th.th November.

You may be thinking that the folks at AMD can now put on their work boots, slip on their flip-flops, and enjoy a break, but according to an interview with AMD’s Executive Vice President of Computing and Graphics Business Group Rick Bergman published Per investment site The Street, nothing could be further from the truth as AMD strives to deliver equally enjoyable generational leaps with its Zen 4 CPU and RDNA 3 GPU architectures.

At the beginning of the interview, Bergman was understandably allowed to enjoy the glory of the tremendous reception Ryzen 5000 Series processors have received. Bergman explained that AMD had been planning to launch the processor for quite some time and expected great success, but product partners can only produce a limited quantity. However, he assured The Street that “We have a very healthy supply amount”, to cover the increased demand, which is in line with the guarantees we saw earlier in the week from UK retailers.

On the subject of hybrid core chips, Bergman seemed to indicate that he would not be following in Intel / Arm’s footsteps with LITTLE / large core combos. The main reason given was that AMD laptops can already provide “24, 25 hours of battery life”. Instead, Bergman scoffed at having other energy-efficient innovations.

According to our headline, AMD’s executive vice president was questioned about future product updates. “Everything is analyzed to obtain more performance”, Bergman responded, noting that a similar long list of optimization strategies is available that made Zen 3’s 19 percent IPC gain possible, and Zen 4 will move to 5nm. On the subject of RDNA 3 GPUs, Bergman later confirmed that AMD was again targeting a 50% plus improvement in GPU performance per watt from generation to generation.

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