Complete with its Infinity Fabric laden with AMD's six gems compromising of Ryzen and Ryzen Pro, Radeon, SenseMI, GuardMI, Zen and EPYC, AMD's avenging, superhero-like, next-gen technologies are making life very tough for Intel, and great again for PC buyers.
AMD's Ryzen processors were the talk of 2017, forcing Intel to finally respond in a significant way at long last, ending years of incrementalism, with AMD rising to the challenge with pedal to the metal for 2018 and beyond.
In late 2017, I attended two AMD events, one on AMD's Ryzen Mobile processor, and the second on AMD's Ryzen Pro for Australia's workforce, and they're available for you to watch, in full.
AMD makes x86 processors, Radeon graphics engines, and cooling solutions. The range can be a little confusing so here is a primer.
AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) today introduced its most powerful line of AMD PRO A-Series mobile and desktop processors (formerly named “Carrizo PRO” and “Godavari PRO”) continuing its tradition of value and performance.
AMD claims a world’s first high performance Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) System on a Chip (SoC) for Windows based notebooks and all-in-one PCs.
It wasn’t just Intel showing off new processors at CES, but perennial competitor AMD, too.
Chipmaker AMD is aiming for substantial energy efficiency gains in its products over the rest of the decade.
AMD's 'Fusion' processors, initially aimed at the more mobile market, have arrived in Australia, with more powerful versions due to come later in the year - is it enough to defeat the competing ARM tablet threat?
On Tuesday the 18th of January, Intel will launch its new 'Sandy Bridge' processors in Australia, followed by AMD on Tuesday the 1st of February, which will do the same with its Fusion 'APU' range.
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